@@TheDaredevil816 Honestly, I am part Chinese but I still totally agree that China is doing some awful stuff and is super fishy, and it really concerns me. It feels like the start to World War 3, considering how World War 2 started because of a policy of appeasement and a desire for countries to stay out of conflict- just like right now. Some people would call you racist for saying that but as a part chinese I do not find it offensive, because it is directed at the awful chinese government, not the people. Idk what anyone can do about it either. At the same time it’s kinda weird and random to put it here so idk.
I was told by my step dad that if I ever think I’m being followed in a car, to turn left four times to see. Because no one else in the world would need to make the same four turns as you
I’m a private investigator, the 4 turn method works well. I personally like to flip 2 Uturns in a row. Just usually a bit faster. If they follow you through those turns. Then it’s official. You’re being tailed
I was being followed one time, I did 4 right turns though (after being followed for over 3 miles with plenty of turns along the way), I never did find out why I was being followed, I pulled over, rolled my window down, and pulled my pistol.
@@mrperson9482 huh? um no if it’s illegal it’s illegal, it doesn’t matter if you’re caught or not, the point of this comment is that she’d get her license revoked if she was caught
@@Namelezz_Guy it’s still illegal though...it’s JUST her license that would’ve been revoked...it doesn’t matter if you’re caught or not it’s still illegal
@@misarieni3532 but that’s what u have to understand. If ur not, ur not tried. So who cares what the law says as long as it doesn’t concern u. I mean yeah if u get caught then the argument “it’s illegal” will certainly come into play but if ur not caught then it doesn’t matter even if it’s murder. The law can’t prosecute what the law doesn’t know.
And back in the day before most cell phones had decent digital cameras built in , it was not uncommon for fairly serious shutter bugs to routinely carry their cameras about to capture impromptu scenery or streetscapes .
He's absolutely right about people over interpreting body language. I have a hangup about eye contact because when I was young I was told it was rude to stare. Somehow, that developed into feeling like eye contact was equal to staring and it makes me uncomfortable. Some think if people cross their arms or put their hands in their pockets while you're talking to them, it means X, Y, Z. That's not universally true at all, but sometimes someone hears it someplace and they accept it as absolute fact. People are so much more complicated than such simple A-to-B equivalencies.
I've found that the people who over interpret body language are people who don't actually know anything about body language. My mom is a behavior scientist. And I've definitely caught some secondhand knowledge. He said it perfectly in the video. You notice things, but don't draw conclusions unless you know more.
I don't make eye contact. Never have. I'm also a fidgety person. I can't just sit still. I can giggle at inappropriate times or smile. I also have a hard time explaining things and I can go off on some random tangent where one subject leads me into another and another and I can forget what my original point was but typing I can keep focus. It's weird. But, yeah, I don't think any "body language expert" is going to do well with me.
Body language is also different for cultures. Then you have people who are autistic or neurodivegerent. Or abused/traumatized who have atypical body language. Personally, I don't look strangers in the eyes, especially other men. Also, anxiety disorders are a thing. So him speaking to me could be enough to make me nervous. I don't have to be guilty or lying to be terrified. Body language isn't an exact science, but a cultural one, and has lead to soooo many issues for me due to miscommunication I didn't even realize was happening.
It's all about monitoring prior to confrontation. Paying attention to interactions throughout the targets daily interactions gives background knowledge of that persons habits during different types of said interactions. Prodding and switching the tone during is a helpful tool as well. Biggest thing, lead the interrogation into a voluntary release of information; or social engineering. Getting somebody to trust you to the point that it all spills out, in what is perceived to be a personal setting, will obtain more information than any other form. Be that guy/girl that can just know you need a friend. Be that shoulder to lean on that is so instantly trustworthy that it's useless to withhold information. It's all an act... a circus, and you're the ringmaster.
One is hired to take interest, the other is personally invested. Not a thin line, but hey none of that matters really relative to the fact theres still someone following you.
@@leonmat26 In most cases, the paparazzi are initially hired by the official( management) side of the person being paped. Everything is planned in Hollywood
Appreciate the shade thrown at the "Ex-FBI body language expert". Especially since most of that guy's "tells" are signs of neuroatypicality or trauma. How many innocent people you think got dinged (or at least harassed) by the Feds (and other LEOs) because guys like that assume difficulty with eye contact means you're a liar?
Exactly. You can just be introvert. You can be distracted for a number of reasons, not just because you're lying or hiding something. Maybe your tooth aches, maybe you fight with your gf/bf that day, maybe you got a ticket...
Exactly. You can just be introvert. You can be distracted for a number of reasons, not just because you're lying or hiding something. Maybe your tooth aches, maybe you fight with your gf/bf that day, maybe you got a ticket...
@@Growingdopamine818 A successful stealth PI doesn’t share the high profile jobs he has solved. I guarantee he would not have survived in such a cut throat business
I work is a investigator in Vegas. Hands down one of the best jobs you could ever do. One thing no one ever brings up is how on point you have to be with your reports as we could called to court for just about everything. Also Vegas PD really likes us. They got my back on more then one occasion.
@@JankyJack yeah if that’s correct I’m license to work in California Nevada Utah and Arizona. There are a few states that you don’t need a technical private investigator license to work in. And there’s also a few legal loopholes. For instance if I follow a case to let’s say New Jersey and I don’t have a license there I can contact a local company split some of the profits with them and they can make me a temporary employee under their license. I’ve also handled a case in Mexico and I know of investigator has handled a case in Germany as well as Canada. For international work because everything is basically being filed under United States courts as long as you’re just gathering evidence and information and you don’t openly tell the local police what you’re doing you should be fine but you definitely have to be a little bit more cautious because unlike in the states he can’t show them your identification card and you could possibly end up getting arrested.
Maybe women are less likely to hire a private investigator and only wait till they are fairly certain. The men who hire an investigator might be more insecure or jealous. There's a lot of ways to look at it
@@AndyKayKandA 50% isn't just "got it right half the time" - it literally amounts to a coin toss for guys. And that's among the guys who already were convinced enough to pay for a private detective! Fascinating.
I hate the "looking away they must be hiding something" thing, social anxiety and the inability to make eye contact is way more common than people realize.
And cultures. Some cultures find eye contact rude. Others find lack of eye contact rude. Also social anxiety, as you pointed out, along with a plethora of other potential reasons why body language meanings may vary person-to-person.
Fun listening to him, truly fascinating to learn some of the lines a PI can or can't cross. Hope they have him back to do more reviews, I want to see more!!
"This isn't a very good president movie. It would have been a lot better if it was about me. Much better. The best president movies are about me. Believe me! I'd still be the president if it hadn't been stolen! It never would have happened if Vlad wasn't mad at me!"
No surprise he gave "True Detective" an 8. It is one of best series ever made. Great script, mind-blowing acting. Ofcourse I'm talking specifically about season 1!
In “Vertigo,” Jimmy Stewart stops in the middle of the lane because the woman he was following had just pulled up to his apartment. He then parked his car and approached her to have a conversation. He wasn’t really trying be remain unseen at that point.
Yeah and in "Sherlock" they should have shown him the entire scene. Dimmock had already come to the conclusion that the victim had died due to suicide and Sherlock was proving that it was murder since the bullet wound was on the right side of his head.
People go "why did they not cover this or that?" but since every other show on TV is about a PI, it's hard to cover them all. I like that he uses almost the full spectrum and actually gives 10/10.
I appreciate that he specifies not to fall into the FBI body leading trap. You CANNOT tell categorically whether someone is lying just by watching their eyes, or their brow, etc. You need to develop an instinct for that over time. I’m also FASCINATED by the statistic about women being so freakishly accurate in their instinct for when a man is having an affair. That’s really impressive…
Never underestimate the power of a women's intuition. Some women can recognize your game before you even play it. Couldn't find the source of that quote, but that statistic is kind of terrifying. Screw anyone who cheats on another person anyway.
Yes, the "tells" of someone lying are just the same of someone terrified or extremely uncomfortable, which would very likely be the case if you´re being interrogated.
The PI scene that's always stuck out to me most was in China Town when Jack Nicholson takes a business card from somebody, and then later in the film gives the business card to somebody else and pretends to be them. I'd love to see them go over that
As a former private investigator I can tell you that 90% of the work is total boredom and 10% action. Sit and wait and watch, then follow someone. Then write reports. That's the job in a nutshell.
I dunno, honestly you could flip the stat - say that women don’t hire someone unless they’re *really sure*, whereas men are more likely to be paranoid, and therefore wrong, about their wife’s platonic friendships/coworkers who are men. That doesn’t necessarily mean that women will always figure it out.
All me exes new EXACTLY when I had sex with someone else. It's really metalhysical on a level. It's their super power Oh, and, fyi, that was always during open relationships
It's a bit of survivorship bias, though. He doesn't know the cases when someone was cheating and the partner *didn't* suspect it, nor does he know the cases where a partner does suspect it but doesn't employ a PI. It's better framed as "women are rarely wrong when they suspect enough to call a PI".
I've been a private investigator for over a decade and it's refreshing to hear someone from my profession dispel a lot of the Hollywood rumors about what our job is. Excellent video
The "if it's online it's there forever and it will be found" is chilling. I mean, I've always known it, but putting it like that by a PI is really chilling.
He can't really rate Sherlock Holmes as a PI. Holmes explicitly said that he was a "consulting detective" and not an "investigator into private affairs", saying that he would never stoop to something so mundane. Holmes solves crimes. He does not investigate into infidelity or other nonsense. If it turns out no crime was committed, he quickly drops the case. The police employ him as a consultant and, as for his disguise, in that scene he was in the middle of circus freaks. Looking absurd was the best disguise
@Joe Mangle I think he had a private detective license. If you remember he took on many cases outside of the ones he worked on with the police, usually because of prodding from Natalie.
If you live in urban or suburban areas , you probably have seen PI ( or otherwise people doing PI- ish activities professionally , that may or may not require a literal Detective License in that jurisdiction ) . They were just doing so discreetly .
tbh id'say jessica jones i a solid 6.5. it's marvel ofc, so in the end the whole pi thing is tossed over the windows. but they did their best. ( damn i whish i could jump as far as her so i could have nice picture, fck superheroes)
Fun fact: the peodession of private investigator/detective first came about in France in the first half of the 19th century by a reformed bandit called Vidocq. Vidicq invented and codified many of the first forensic techniques that were adopted by the police, as Vidocq often worked closely with the police. He became the inspiration for many fictional detectives like Holmes, Poirot and Maigret.
I was watching an episode of the1980's version of Magnum P.I. a few months ago. I couldn't help but laugh when there was a scene with 6'4" Tom Selleck sitting in a bright red Ferrari with the top down, and he's supposedly watching for a particular person to come out of the building across the street and he doesn't expect to get noticed! Between women being interested in him and men being interested in the car, he'd probably draw a crowd.
Such a law-abiding PI. So basically to make an entertaining film/TV show, the detective has to break laws frequently. I'm more shook about seeing James Bond in a Southern accent to be honest... 😱🙀 I can't unsee it Oh and remember how Ariadne Oliver (from the Agatha Christie's "Poirot") would always talk about the female intuition. Thank you for this, great upload.
I think the Sherlock scene was a bit underrated, because there's a bit of context missing because Sherlock got there first and got a chance to assess the scene first and determined that it wasn't a suicide. He's showing all the ways that the guy is left handed to dissuade the assumption being made that the case was a suicide Addendum: There are few more things with the Sherlock clip that are lost context when this clip is played in a vacuum. Sherlock is not a Private Investigator, he's a Consultant Detective. The Police ask him to help them investigate these cases. And one more important note, Dummock is not the guy Sherlock usually works with. It's Lieutenant Lestrade, who's out of town in this episode. Lestrade is up to scuff on Sherlock and his methodology, Dummock isn't
If you see them, they're doing a bad job. I worked at a place when a fired employee tried to sue the employer. His lawyer sent a private investigator to gather evidence for the civil suit. The same guy came in every night for 2 months. I was working in a concert hall so this guy would show up for a gangster rap show followed by a death metal show followed by a K-pop show and all the while, he was taking pictures of my crew doing their job everyday. Still, most of my co-workers never noticed.
Same for me, except it's tea. Also, I prefer a nightstand to my right on the bed, and I randomly choose electrical outlets. Most of us left handed people seem to be a bit mixed, and we have better proficiency with our right hands than right handed people ever will with their left because this world is designed around them.
im left-handed and use both hands for mugs, but mostly the right hand. I also use a knife with the left hand unless im also holding a fork. Then im holding the knife in the right hand. Sherlock would be so confused.
I don't think people mind if the show gets something wrong, but with the cops saying it was a suicide, any further investigation of the possibility of homicide is out the window at that point. They might reclassify the case after the autopsy at the earliest, but by that time the killer is gone or has killed again. Sherlock was in the right to point all that out. Also, he found the crime scene and is contracted by the police regularly to help, so it's not out of the question for him to be allowed to investigate. Though, each state and country would have their own rules to abide by.
I can’t remember if it was the detective or the forensics guy but one of them pointed out that someone being left handed is nice to know but doesn’t necessarily dictate that they use their dominant hand for *everything*, so it wouldn’t necessarily rule out a left-hander using a gun with their right hand. (And I have a left handed sibling who does use their right hand for quite a lot, just because you don’t always have access to proper tools, and a partner who is right handed but uses their left hand for some things, so I believe it.)
Nah I'm not pissed. This video is about how realistic these movies/shows are and i know that the character Sherlock Holmes isn't that realistic. I'm fine with 5/10
@@HirathaYT There are a lot of people that use their weak hand over their dominant hand for certain tasks. However, firing a weapon is usually not one of those things. That's one of those tasks where the dominant hand would be used out of preference or habit. Especially since in England guns aren't used that often for anything other than sport for the majority of people. Yes, it is possible that someone will use their off-hand to shoot, it's unlikely. Especially considering the entire apartment is littered with hints of left-handedness.
Now I'm really curious to know what the "special hardware and software" he's talking about that only licensed investigators can use is capable of... Sounds like some really advanced stuff
1) "No traffic between the cars" in the movie Vertigo is actually realistic for the era which is 1958. In that time period, about 39.3% of people use cars (and those who own cars only had one), while over 48% of people walked or used the bus/streetcar. If anything, there should be more pedestrians than depicted in Vertigo. 2) No security on the Internet is very frightenly true. The Internet (or more accurately the World Wide Web) was never really designed with security in mind. All the security features today were add to it afterwards and anyone with the knowledge and proper equipment can break any security on the Web if they are willing to spend the time and effort. Users are only safe in the sense that hackers have so many victims to choose from that they probably over look a specific user ... for the moment.
i was wondering if someone made this point. when hiding in a circus, the best disguise is a clown. if everyone around you looks strange you won't stand out if you look a bit silly, and the silly traits will draw attention away from your normal traits so you are less likely to be recognized once you discard the disguise.
2:30 To be fair, Sherlock (Cumberbatch) is made up and a bit different than a regular PI, he's a consulting detective, and about the investigators will eventually notice stuff with crime scene photos etc., Sherlock told Detective inspector Dimmock that the investigation might "move a bit quicker" if he takes Sherlock's words as gospel.
No Raymond Chandler? I would have loved to see his impressions on some of the Philip Marlowe adaptations like Murder, My Sweet (1944), The Big Sleep (1946), or The Brasher Doubloon (1947). Also Films like The Maltese Falcon, either the 1931 or 1941.
The talk about social media is on spot. If you wanna have your privacy secured, either don´t use social media at all, or use some sort of "fake" account with no real information to have contact with friends - still, bear in mind, that Facebook in particular is recording every message you´ve sent, every status you´ve dis/liked, etc; so either Facebook itself or state authorities can find out, who you are. And that stuff will very likely remain on their servers even after you delete your account. On the internet, anonymity is your best friend.
12:48 to be more specific when he says multiple turns do 4 four turns in the same direction so four right or four left if they're still behind you there's a good chance they're tailing you. Find a well lit populated place like a Super market or something like that
11:02 The Magnum P.I. clip is dated 1994, yet the original series (which this is since it has Tom Selleck driving) ran from 1980-1988. The reboot started in 2018.
3:04: "But, if you start assuming too much, you might have fallen into a trap for what they're trying to make themselves be portrayed as." You might also just fall into a trap of your own prejudices and expectations. I'm left-handed, but I do a lot of things right-handed, because that was more convenient. My mouse is on the right side of the keyboard, and my alarm clock is on the right side of my desk. I'll eat with fork and knife in either hand, and I'll pick up a pitcher or mug with whichever hand's convenient. I also part my hair from left to right (with my left hand), something that Cracked thinks left-handers never do. If you're snooping around my apartment trying to figure out whether I'm left- or right- handed, you're better off checking my scissors. But not the scissors that came with my cooking knife set. Those are right-handed. I use them perfectly well, because there weren't always left-handed scissors available. So maybe just ask my parents.
Sherlock would be so incredibly annoyed to know he was included in a video about Private Investigators. He is very adamant about the fact he is the one and only consulting detective in existence, not a private investigator.
Let me get this straight: looking into an apartment with telephoto lens is a no-no ("expectation of privacy"), but if a wife brings a cheating husband’s laptop, it is fair game and legal?
In most countries marriage means that everything you own is partially also owned by your wife/husband. Same as they have automatic access to information about you in hospital, at police station etc.
Kinda on-topic thing to relate: look up the recording of conversations laws in your country/state/whatever. That way you know if you can record certain conversations if needed for evidence against someone/prove your innocence at some point. For example: In Canada, it is federal law that you can record any conversation that you are involved in, involved as in participating. Whether it's a phone call, in-person etc... also you must check what consent is needed, some places require all-parties consent IOW everyone needs to consent to being recorded. In Canada you only need one-party consent... sooooo basically you can consent for yourself to be recorded, to yourself, in your mind. Final result: you are legally allowed to record any of YOUR conversations in Canada w/o telling the other person.
Yep, it's why sometimes you get that "this call is being recorded for quality assurance" when you are talking to a business or organization and sometimes you don't.
Interesting to hear his honest assessment of the comparisons between PI work and law enforcement actually be a plug for their service. The bureaucracy and red tape surrounding just reporting a stolen [edit] _musical_ instrument to the police can be totally side-stepped by using a more expensive but more committed PI facility. Will keep this in mind. 😁
The Ace Ventura part with him ACTUALLY taking the dog seems more like a a case of opportunity and that the intention was to verify the suspect and the whether the dog could be accessible on return visits.
great content... I am a one man private investigation operation in Anchorage, Alaska.. I contract through the federal government and the state... the private cases when you surveil can get interesting.. when you know your city I think it is about anticipating their destination when tailing in your vehicle... I followed an alleged drug dealer not long ago.. it was intense situation.. the other concept I realized is that when following someone on foot or in a bar not to get in your head about them making you.. obviously you should know from your client the subject's awareness of possibly being followed.. but my point was don't overthink that because they made quick eye contact with you that you are made... anyway... I am rambling a little bit.. I have a surveillance gig here tomorrow that I am prepping
I'm left-handed in writing but most people's assumptions about which hand I use for different things are wrong.. the only thing they know for sure is I write with my left hand.
My ex-boss had a p.i. that looked like Vicky Lawrence from Mama's Place - someone's grandma & the damnedest people would talk to her. You almost expected her to whip out a plate of cookies.
fun fact: he is still on duty and probably got a contract to investigate in insider's recording room from someone.
@@TheDaredevil816
Honestly, I am part Chinese but I still totally agree that China is doing some awful stuff and is super fishy, and it really concerns me. It feels like the start to World War 3, considering how World War 2 started because of a policy of appeasement and a desire for countries to stay out of conflict- just like right now.
Some people would call you racist for saying that but as a part chinese I do not find it offensive, because it is directed at the awful chinese government, not the people.
Idk what anyone can do about it either.
At the same time it’s kinda weird and random to put it here so idk.
@Cutie Park dont just think actually research and share it with others even if they deem youas cuckoo, I know I am being perceived as one such
That's why you can see a microphone in his shirt
@@TheDaredevil816 yeah, people think you’re crazy when you spout idiotic shit.
@@cheezie9520 alrigth buddy, I watched it and we need to spread it. Before it worsen
I was told by my step dad that if I ever think I’m being followed in a car, to turn left four times to see. Because no one else in the world would need to make the same four turns as you
Unless they’re looking for a parking spot
I’m a private investigator, the 4 turn method works well. I personally like to flip 2 Uturns in a row. Just usually a bit faster. If they follow you through those turns. Then it’s official. You’re being tailed
I was being followed one time, I did 4 right turns though (after being followed for over 3 miles with plenty of turns along the way), I never did find out why I was being followed, I pulled over, rolled my window down, and pulled my pistol.
I have been followed once but didn't trust my gut. They ended up robbing me and my family when I got home.
@@Murf181 wut?
"If she was licensed, she wouldn't be for much longer."
_Pause_
_"If she was _*_caught_*_ doing it"_
It's only illegal if you get caught or plan to show it.
@@mrperson9482 huh? um no if it’s illegal it’s illegal, it doesn’t matter if you’re caught or not, the point of this comment is that she’d get her license revoked if she was caught
@@misarieni3532 yeah... keyword _”if”_
@@Namelezz_Guy it’s still illegal though...it’s JUST her license that would’ve been revoked...it doesn’t matter if you’re caught or not it’s still illegal
@@misarieni3532 but that’s what u have to understand. If ur not, ur not tried. So who cares what the law says as long as it doesn’t concern u. I mean yeah if u get caught then the argument “it’s illegal” will certainly come into play but if ur not caught then it doesn’t matter even if it’s murder. The law can’t prosecute what the law doesn’t know.
Veronica Mars just sitting up there out in the open during the day with a massive camera.
Yup... Really being a sneak
"Oh, this? I was, uh, bird-watching!"
@@TornadoWhirl33 "In a window? A story down from you?"
That's your cover story, and you're sticking to it .
And back in the day before most cell phones had decent digital cameras built in , it was not uncommon for fairly serious shutter bugs to routinely carry their cameras about to capture impromptu scenery or streetscapes .
That's the idea. If there's someone out in the open with a massive camera, then you don't have a reasonable expectation of privacy.
He's absolutely right about people over interpreting body language. I have a hangup about eye contact because when I was young I was told it was rude to stare. Somehow, that developed into feeling like eye contact was equal to staring and it makes me uncomfortable. Some think if people cross their arms or put their hands in their pockets while you're talking to them, it means X, Y, Z. That's not universally true at all, but sometimes someone hears it someplace and they accept it as absolute fact. People are so much more complicated than such simple A-to-B equivalencies.
I've found that the people who over interpret body language are people who don't actually know anything about body language. My mom is a behavior scientist. And I've definitely caught some secondhand knowledge. He said it perfectly in the video. You notice things, but don't draw conclusions unless you know more.
Body language, writing style and lie detctors are debunked bullshit by now
I don't make eye contact. Never have. I'm also a fidgety person. I can't just sit still. I can giggle at inappropriate times or smile. I also have a hard time explaining things and I can go off on some random tangent where one subject leads me into another and another and I can forget what my original point was but typing I can keep focus. It's weird. But, yeah, I don't think any "body language expert" is going to do well with me.
Body language is also different for cultures. Then you have people who are autistic or neurodivegerent. Or abused/traumatized who have atypical body language. Personally, I don't look strangers in the eyes, especially other men. Also, anxiety disorders are a thing. So him speaking to me could be enough to make me nervous. I don't have to be guilty or lying to be terrified. Body language isn't an exact science, but a cultural one, and has lead to soooo many issues for me due to miscommunication I didn't even realize was happening.
It's all about monitoring prior to confrontation. Paying attention to interactions throughout the targets daily interactions gives background knowledge of that persons habits during different types of said interactions. Prodding and switching the tone during is a helpful tool as well. Biggest thing, lead the interrogation into a voluntary release of information; or social engineering.
Getting somebody to trust you to the point that it all spills out, in what is perceived to be a personal setting, will obtain more information than any other form.
Be that guy/girl that can just know you need a friend. Be that shoulder to lean on that is so instantly trustworthy that it's useless to withhold information. It's all an act... a circus, and you're the ringmaster.
It seems in Hollywood the lines between Stalker and Private Investigator is very very thin
One is hired to take interest, the other is personally invested. Not a thin line, but hey none of that matters really relative to the fact theres still someone following you.
The key step to prevent/ interdict theft / whatever nefarious endeavor , it to be able to Think like a thief/ whatever bad actor .
Right on that line is a paparazzi.
More invested than a private investigator, but mostly for business unlike a stalker.
@@leonmat26 In most cases, the paparazzi are initially hired by the official( management) side of the person being paped. Everything is planned in Hollywood
Just like the lines between stalking and being romantic in Hollywood
up next: former dead people react to death scenes in movies and TV shows
Broo this comment about underrated asf
And president is trump, and later Obama reacts to trump’s reactions
@@CamDavelle thx my guy
I mean, you could actually ask people who've had near-death-experiences. That might be pretty interesting.
aaarrr
He's absolutely right about nothing on the Internet being truly secure.
Just be aware, that if you upload to the cloud, eventually it's going to rain.
ROTFL
You are telling me my porn history is exposed?
Appreciate the shade thrown at the "Ex-FBI body language expert". Especially since most of that guy's "tells" are signs of neuroatypicality or trauma. How many innocent people you think got dinged (or at least harassed) by the Feds (and other LEOs) because guys like that assume difficulty with eye contact means you're a liar?
Exactly.
You can just be introvert.
You can be distracted for a number of reasons, not just because you're lying or hiding something. Maybe your tooth aches, maybe you fight with your gf/bf that day, maybe you got a ticket...
Exactly.
You can just be introvert.
You can be distracted for a number of reasons, not just because you're lying or hiding something. Maybe your tooth aches, maybe you fight with your gf/bf that day, maybe you got a ticket...
@@MartinMartinez-uw9ox Exactly thats why I said don't fall into the trap
Anyone worth anything gets the person's baseline then redflags when there's a deviation. If it's your norm, you should be fine.
None. I don't think people who are in charged of investigation in law enforcement agencies are this dumb.
If a movie would be made about his life he would be played by Mark Ruffalo
Change my mind
Because they look alike lol
Mark Ruffalo would be too old by then. It would have to be Noah Centineo in a few years
Good catch Ruffalo is very handsome also ( one of my favorites movies View from the top ✈️✍🏻❤️⏱
Yea . But I doubt this dudes life is worth the screen time... maybe a higher up well known p.i whose worked on big cases. Then maybe
@@Growingdopamine818 A successful stealth PI doesn’t share the high profile jobs he has solved. I guarantee he would not have survived in such a cut throat business
I work is a investigator in Vegas. Hands down one of the best jobs you could ever do. One thing no one ever brings up is how on point you have to be with your reports as we could called to court for just about everything. Also Vegas PD really likes us. They got my back on more then one occasion.
So he brought up a point I didn't know. When he said he could investigate anywhere in the world, investigators have no jurisdiction?
@@billd3356 only in states you are certified. Cant do out of country. in the U.S. anyway. unless you have a federal contract.
@@JankyJack yeah if that’s correct I’m license to work in California Nevada Utah and Arizona.
There are a few states that you don’t need a technical private investigator license to work in. And there’s also a few legal loopholes. For instance if I follow a case to let’s say New Jersey and I don’t have a license there I can contact a local company split some of the profits with them and they can make me a temporary employee under their license.
I’ve also handled a case in Mexico and I know of investigator has handled a case in Germany as well as Canada. For international work because everything is basically being filed under United States courts as long as you’re just gathering evidence and information and you don’t openly tell the local police what you’re doing you should be fine but you definitely have to be a little bit more cautious because unlike in the states he can’t show them your identification card and you could possibly end up getting arrested.
How do you get into the industry. I seriously think this is something I'd love doing.
Hoho nice
That statistic about women being right 96/97% of the time is fascinating, especially versus the 50% for men
And its true
@@AndyKayKandA sorry I thought you were talking about women telling the truth more not the cheating thing
@@AndyKayKandA and I didn't realize you were the guy in the video
Maybe women are less likely to hire a private investigator and only wait till they are fairly certain. The men who hire an investigator might be more insecure or jealous. There's a lot of ways to look at it
@@AndyKayKandA 50% isn't just "got it right half the time" - it literally amounts to a coin toss for guys. And that's among the guys who already were convinced enough to pay for a private detective! Fascinating.
I've been watching so many of the "Professional Rates Scenes From Movies and TV Shows" and I love them! Keep up the awesome content :)
Did the same. The bad part is I couldn't prevent myself from spoiling me movies I wanted to watch.
I hate the "looking away they must be hiding something" thing, social anxiety and the inability to make eye contact is way more common than people realize.
agreed
And cultures. Some cultures find eye contact rude. Others find lack of eye contact rude.
Also social anxiety, as you pointed out, along with a plethora of other potential reasons why body language meanings may vary person-to-person.
So you take that into account.
Love how he gives the movies credit for trying to be entertaining but still gives a pretty honest score
Fun listening to him, truly fascinating to learn some of the lines a PI can or can't cross. Hope they have him back to do more reviews, I want to see more!!
Next : former president react to president movie.
And the president movie is Monsters v Aliens.
"This isn't a very good president movie. It would have been a lot better if it was about me. Much better. The best president movies are about me. Believe me! I'd still be the president if it hadn't been stolen! It never would have happened if Vlad wasn't mad at me!"
White House down huh?
"Lincoln: The Vampire Hunter".
@@Geheimnis-c2e the movie called "Dave", or "W".
No surprise he gave "True Detective" an 8. It is one of best series ever made. Great script, mind-blowing acting.
Ofcourse I'm talking specifically about season 1!
Until that dogshit last episode.
Matthew McConaughey was great in this.
For sure season 1
true, but to be more accurate they end being pi only in the end, they are still former officer much of the time. ( but damn that serie)
That one scene
If he rates detective conan, he'll finish half of it when he's 800 years old.
@thatguy 00 weebs and our anime. Dimwit.
@@potatomatop9326 thank you for the clarification, fellow weeb
@@potatomatop9326 I don’t like anime
@thatguy 00 malding much
@thatguy 00 Damn, "dimwit" is a gender?
In “Vertigo,” Jimmy Stewart stops in the middle of the lane because the woman he was following had just pulled up to his apartment. He then parked his car and approached her to have a conversation. He wasn’t really trying be remain unseen at that point.
It didn't appear he was trying to be unseen at any point
Yeah and in "Sherlock" they should have shown him the entire scene. Dimmock had already come to the conclusion that the victim had died due to suicide and Sherlock was proving that it was murder since the bullet wound was on the right side of his head.
People go "why did they not cover this or that?" but since every other show on TV is about a PI, it's hard to cover them all. I like that he uses almost the full spectrum and actually gives 10/10.
So true and I didn't pick
I appreciate that he specifies not to fall into the FBI body leading trap. You CANNOT tell categorically whether someone is lying just by watching their eyes, or their brow, etc. You need to develop an instinct for that over time.
I’m also FASCINATED by the statistic about women being so freakishly accurate in their instinct for when a man is having an affair. That’s really impressive…
Never underestimate the power of a women's intuition. Some women can recognize your game before you even play it.
Couldn't find the source of that quote, but that statistic is kind of terrifying. Screw anyone who cheats on another person anyway.
@@yewcraynian7915 having done it, and been caught, and living with guilt and shame for years, I must agree.
@@Moose92411 It could also mean that women only hire a private investigator when they're already sure.
Yes, the "tells" of someone lying are just the same of someone terrified or extremely uncomfortable, which would very likely be the case if you´re being interrogated.
right like have they ever heard of anxiety
The PI scene that's always stuck out to me most was in China Town when Jack Nicholson takes a business card from somebody, and then later in the film gives the business card to somebody else and pretends to be them. I'd love to see them go over that
I couldn't stop seeing Mark Ruffallo and George Lopez while watching this guy.
So many obvious differences, Damn good thing your not a PI
@@AndyKayKandA Mark Ruffalo in Thanks for Sharing ( handsome addict 😉🎥)
@@AndyKayKandA I think if you combined their faces, it wouldn't be too far off.
💯
As a former private investigator I can tell you that 90% of the work is total boredom and 10% action. Sit and wait and watch, then follow someone. Then write reports. That's the job in a nutshell.
that stat about women knowing when their men are cheating is amazing. I'd guess scent plays a major factor.
I suspect it's not even so clinical, it probably just comes down to a certain kind of emotional intelligence.
I dunno, honestly you could flip the stat - say that women don’t hire someone unless they’re *really sure*, whereas men are more likely to be paranoid, and therefore wrong, about their wife’s platonic friendships/coworkers who are men. That doesn’t necessarily mean that women will always figure it out.
@@HirathaYT good approach. And yeah we are a little bit paranoid.
All me exes new EXACTLY when I had sex with someone else. It's really metalhysical on a level. It's their super power
Oh, and, fyi, that was always during open relationships
It's a bit of survivorship bias, though. He doesn't know the cases when someone was cheating and the partner *didn't* suspect it, nor does he know the cases where a partner does suspect it but doesn't employ a PI.
It's better framed as "women are rarely wrong when they suspect enough to call a PI".
Imagine him rating conan, he would end up making a bigger franchise just off the sheer length than the MCU
YES OMG
At first I thought, why is True Detective here. Then yeah, they were in fact, private detectives at that point in the story.
I've been a private investigator for over a decade and it's refreshing to hear someone from my profession dispel a lot of the Hollywood rumors about what our job is. Excellent video
The "if it's online it's there forever and it will be found" is chilling. I mean, I've always known it, but putting it like that by a PI is really chilling.
it is tho, don't put anything on internet, only the things you are not worried to be accountable for. if some.
He can't really rate Sherlock Holmes as a PI. Holmes explicitly said that he was a "consulting detective" and not an "investigator into private affairs", saying that he would never stoop to something so mundane. Holmes solves crimes. He does not investigate into infidelity or other nonsense. If it turns out no crime was committed, he quickly drops the case. The police employ him as a consultant and, as for his disguise, in that scene he was in the middle of circus freaks. Looking absurd was the best disguise
No Monk? Motherless Brooklyn? We need a Part 2. Thanks for posting.
I suggest Jessica Jones as well in part 2
@Joe Mangle I think he had a private detective license. If you remember he took on many cases outside of the ones he worked on with the police, usually because of prodding from Natalie.
Im all for a part 2
Really love the video. I've never seen a real detective! He is perfect! And he explained it well.
If you live in urban or suburban areas , you probably have seen PI ( or otherwise people doing PI- ish activities professionally , that may or may not require a literal Detective License in that jurisdiction ) . They were just doing so discreetly .
Thank You
This was so interesting to watch, it’s a shame we didn’t see Jessica Jones
But you did, with Veronica; -)
@@martinreinders6870 lol true, but way back in time
tbh id'say jessica jones i a solid 6.5. it's marvel ofc, so in the end the whole pi thing is tossed over the windows. but they did their best. ( damn i whish i could jump as far as her so i could have nice picture, fck superheroes)
Fun fact: the peodession of private investigator/detective first came about in France in the first half of the 19th century by a reformed bandit called Vidocq. Vidicq invented and codified many of the first forensic techniques that were adopted by the police, as Vidocq often worked closely with the police. He became the inspiration for many fictional detectives like Holmes, Poirot and Maigret.
Arthur Conan Doyle told his professor Dr. Joseph Bell, that he was the inspiration for Sherlock Holmes
This dude looks like he could stay around and look inconspicuous
I was watching an episode of the1980's version of Magnum P.I. a few months ago. I couldn't help but laugh when there was a scene with 6'4" Tom Selleck sitting in a bright red Ferrari with the top down, and he's supposedly watching for a particular person to come out of the building across the street and he doesn't expect to get noticed! Between women being interested in him and men being interested in the car, he'd probably draw a crowd.
it the perfect blend. who would expect it? even the pi says, its fake and dont believe it
Freakin' love the concept of this series. Terrific idea; wish I came up with it. Great work; thank you!
I'd like to hear this guy's take on Burn Notice and some of the advice that Michael Weston gives about surveillance and such.
I was hoping for 4 shows. Burn Notice, Psych, White Collar and Monk
This guy just convinced me not to trust Priuses...
I dont trust them
Haven't trusted them (or their owners) since they were first rolled out.
This guy is so literal. Exactly what youd expect from a PI.
Such a law-abiding PI. So basically to make an entertaining film/TV show, the detective has to break laws frequently.
I'm more shook about seeing James Bond in a Southern accent to be honest... 😱🙀 I can't unsee it
Oh and remember how Ariadne Oliver (from the Agatha Christie's "Poirot") would always talk about the female intuition. Thank you for this, great upload.
For sure Cant unhear it
Knives Out is soo good if you love the detective genre
Oh sweet, so happy to finally see a real P.I. review P.I. medias ☺️
I think the Sherlock scene was a bit underrated, because there's a bit of context missing because Sherlock got there first and got a chance to assess the scene first and determined that it wasn't a suicide.
He's showing all the ways that the guy is left handed to dissuade the assumption being made that the case was a suicide
Addendum: There are few more things with the Sherlock clip that are lost context when this clip is played in a vacuum. Sherlock is not a Private Investigator, he's a Consultant Detective. The Police ask him to help them investigate these cases. And one more important note, Dummock is not the guy Sherlock usually works with. It's Lieutenant Lestrade, who's out of town in this episode. Lestrade is up to scuff on Sherlock and his methodology, Dummock isn't
DI Lestrade. British police don't have lieutenants.
This is first time I'm seeing a Private Investigator out of books.
You’ve seen them just didn’t know it.
Devdev 👀
If you see them, they're doing a bad job. I worked at a place when a fired employee tried to sue the employer. His lawyer sent a private investigator to gather evidence for the civil suit. The same guy came in every night for 2 months. I was working in a concert hall so this guy would show up for a gangster rap show followed by a death metal show followed by a K-pop show and all the while, he was taking pictures of my crew doing their job everyday. Still, most of my co-workers never noticed.
I'm left-handed and I actually hold a cup of coffee with the right hand.
Same for me, except it's tea. Also, I prefer a nightstand to my right on the bed, and I randomly choose electrical outlets. Most of us left handed people seem to be a bit mixed, and we have better proficiency with our right hands than right handed people ever will with their left because this world is designed around them.
Same cuz everyone, except my dad, is right-handed and I got used to seeing them holding it on their right hand and subconsciously did it.
im left-handed and use both hands for mugs, but mostly the right hand. I also use a knife with the left hand unless im also holding a fork. Then im holding the knife in the right hand. Sherlock would be so confused.
You hold it in non dominant hand so that you could use your dominant hand. Writers of Sherlock made him dumber. Relax. It happened.
the power socket observation only made me realize that i always plug things into my non-dominant side lol
Thanks for sharing; Love that Ace Ventura Pet Detective. So funny!!
Sherlock getting 5/10 ... damn bro fans are going to be really pissed off
I don't think people mind if the show gets something wrong, but with the cops saying it was a suicide, any further investigation of the possibility of homicide is out the window at that point. They might reclassify the case after the autopsy at the earliest, but by that time the killer is gone or has killed again. Sherlock was in the right to point all that out. Also, he found the crime scene and is contracted by the police regularly to help, so it's not out of the question for him to be allowed to investigate. Though, each state and country would have their own rules to abide by.
I can’t remember if it was the detective or the forensics guy but one of them pointed out that someone being left handed is nice to know but doesn’t necessarily dictate that they use their dominant hand for *everything*, so it wouldn’t necessarily rule out a left-hander using a gun with their right hand. (And I have a left handed sibling who does use their right hand for quite a lot, just because you don’t always have access to proper tools, and a partner who is right handed but uses their left hand for some things, so I believe it.)
Nah I'm not pissed. This video is about how realistic these movies/shows are and i know that the character Sherlock Holmes isn't that realistic. I'm fine with 5/10
@@HirathaYT There are a lot of people that use their weak hand over their dominant hand for certain tasks. However, firing a weapon is usually not one of those things. That's one of those tasks where the dominant hand would be used out of preference or habit. Especially since in England guns aren't used that often for anything other than sport for the majority of people. Yes, it is possible that someone will use their off-hand to shoot, it's unlikely. Especially considering the entire apartment is littered with hints of left-handedness.
The better one got 8 tho...
*Grabs popcorn*
Throwing some shade with that retired FBI line
@Based Janitor absolutely
We love the FBI they make us look good JK JK not looking for any midnight search warrants
The absence of a clip from "The Big Lebowski" is astounding.
Dude.
That comment is just like your opinion man
(I'm joking lol I too wanted them to show it😁)
@@hassanbeydoun2460 I've had a bad night and I hate the f$@n Eagles man.
right???
I think this is my favorite of these videos so far
being a private investigator seems pretty cool, even though it involves a lot of boring activities
Once you rise to a certain level you choose the cases you work personally
isn't all work boring in their own way ? i do love helping people, and it is good enough for me :)
I’m a simple man, I see Sherlock Holmes i click
American or UK one?
facts
Yes, you are.
@@TheKamil2310 I like the series one not sure if it’s UK or US i watch both
it's not that good honestly
Now I'm really curious to know what the "special hardware and software" he's talking about that only licensed investigators can use is capable of... Sounds like some really advanced stuff
More than you can imagine and changing daily
NSA backdoor probably
1) "No traffic between the cars" in the movie Vertigo is actually realistic for the era which is 1958. In that time period, about 39.3% of people use cars (and those who own cars only had one), while over 48% of people walked or used the bus/streetcar. If anything, there should be more pedestrians than depicted in Vertigo.
2) No security on the Internet is very frightenly true. The Internet (or more accurately the World Wide Web) was never really designed with security in mind. All the security features today were add to it afterwards and anyone with the knowledge and proper equipment can break any security on the Web if they are willing to spend the time and effort. Users are only safe in the sense that hackers have so many victims to choose from that they probably over look a specific user ... for the moment.
Please do more of these for Law movies with real life lawyers. Thank you
They did one with a UA-cam channel called legal eagle. He does commentary on law movies. Pretty interesting
theyll be all 0/10, from my experience. just like any other law related 🙃
Sure, sherlock's (RDJ) disguise was a bit extra, but at the same time, we was disguising himself amongst a circus.
i was wondering if someone made this point.
when hiding in a circus, the best disguise is a clown.
if everyone around you looks strange you won't stand out if you look a bit silly, and the silly traits will draw attention away from your normal traits so you are less likely to be recognized once you discard the disguise.
Best way to disguise yourself is to act like you're supposed to be there.
I’m a private investigator. I love these videos. I can definitely agree with this guy
Greatind dear coworker :)
I have a question. if I were to take degree in law can I become a private investigator after that? And how do I apply for a job at PI company?
The reason Jimmy Stewart stopped in the middle of the road was because she went to his apartment. So it shocked him
Really? What movie was that? Thanks
@@lovewhitey2027 ... Vertigo by the great Hitchcock
@@michael777e thanks 🙏🏻
Wait, where's Mike Ehrmantraut, the most OP P.I. on TV? You guys need to do an entire episode on Mike.
He's actually a more realistic portrayal of a PI than most movies
Mike E. is one of the best characters in modern TV history.
This is great and so fantastic for screenwriters. Thank you!
I was hoping he'd rate the private investigator from "Psycho." The way he could tell Norman was hiding something, but just let him keep talking.
5:36 I cannot describe the type of feeling I have hearing that voice come out of that man lol It really caught me off guard.
More from this guy please, he is great!
Sherlock isn’t a private investigator. He’s a consulting detective. He actively works some of the cases (like this one) with the police.
2:30 To be fair, Sherlock (Cumberbatch) is made up and a bit different than a regular PI, he's a consulting detective, and about the investigators will eventually notice stuff with crime scene photos etc., Sherlock told Detective inspector Dimmock that the investigation might "move a bit quicker" if he takes Sherlock's words as gospel.
How can they not have him review Maltese Falcon. Without it none of these shows or movies would be the way the way they are.
YES
damn, as a french Pi i gotta admit you guys have a bit more power when it come to law enforcement. we stay a basic citizen here. good video over all
I have no need for a private investigator, but i have a massive urge to hire this guy to investigate something and tell me the results...
No Raymond Chandler? I would have loved to see his impressions on some of the Philip Marlowe adaptations like Murder, My Sweet (1944), The Big Sleep (1946), or The Brasher Doubloon (1947). Also Films like The Maltese Falcon, either the 1931 or 1941.
My impressions are they need color
The talk about social media is on spot. If you wanna have your privacy secured, either don´t use social media at all, or use some sort of "fake" account with no real information to have contact with friends - still, bear in mind, that Facebook in particular is recording every message you´ve sent, every status you´ve dis/liked, etc; so either Facebook itself or state authorities can find out, who you are. And that stuff will very likely remain on their servers even after you delete your account.
On the internet, anonymity is your best friend.
Insider, i always liked your this "How Real is it"
Finally mentioned Knived out!!
12:48 to be more specific when he says multiple turns do 4 four turns in the same direction so four right or four left if they're still behind you there's a good chance they're tailing you. Find a well lit populated place like a Super market or something like that
11:02 The Magnum P.I. clip is dated 1994, yet the original series (which this is since it has Tom Selleck driving) ran from 1980-1988. The reboot started in 2018.
I love Chinatown- damn that movie is so good
Those statistics at @8:00 are pure gold!
When will be the Serial Killer reacts?
Lmao
3:04: "But, if you start assuming too much, you might have fallen into a trap for what they're trying to make themselves be portrayed as."
You might also just fall into a trap of your own prejudices and expectations.
I'm left-handed, but I do a lot of things right-handed, because that was more convenient. My mouse is on the right side of the keyboard, and my alarm clock is on the right side of my desk. I'll eat with fork and knife in either hand, and I'll pick up a pitcher or mug with whichever hand's convenient. I also part my hair from left to right (with my left hand), something that Cracked thinks left-handers never do.
If you're snooping around my apartment trying to figure out whether I'm left- or right- handed, you're better off checking my scissors.
But not the scissors that came with my cooking knife set. Those are right-handed. I use them perfectly well, because there weren't always left-handed scissors available.
So maybe just ask my parents.
Sherlock would be so incredibly annoyed to know he was included in a video about Private Investigators.
He is very adamant about the fact he is the one and only consulting detective in existence, not a private investigator.
Let me get this straight: looking into an apartment with telephoto lens is a no-no ("expectation of privacy"), but if a wife brings a cheating husband’s laptop, it is fair game and legal?
The law works in funny ways.
If it's your spouse, then it's fair game. Not if you steal somone's laptop and hack into it; that's illegal.
In most countries marriage means that everything you own is partially also owned by your wife/husband. Same as they have automatic access to information about you in hospital, at police station etc.
@@jedys In some states, evidence that has been obtained illegally can legally be admitted as evidence in a case.
If he has given someone else access no expectation of privacy If she brings it to us as hers, well....
Moral of the story, don’t put stuff that you don’t wanna be seen on the internet!
Ding Ding Ding
Kinda on-topic thing to relate: look up the recording of conversations laws in your country/state/whatever. That way you know if you can record certain conversations if needed for evidence against someone/prove your innocence at some point.
For example: In Canada, it is federal law that you can record any conversation that you are involved in, involved as in participating. Whether it's a phone call, in-person etc... also you must check what consent is needed, some places require all-parties consent IOW everyone needs to consent to being recorded. In Canada you only need one-party consent... sooooo basically you can consent for yourself to be recorded, to yourself, in your mind.
Final result: you are legally allowed to record any of YOUR conversations in Canada w/o telling the other person.
Yep, it's why sometimes you get that "this call is being recorded for quality assurance" when you are talking to a business or organization and sometimes you don't.
OMG, Daniel Craig's "southern" accent is atrocious.
Lmao that was the point. He was an homage to many famous PI/detective type characters who had over the top accents 😂
@@sharonwong5688 Oh...was that it.
I burst out laughing when I heard it the first time watching the movie. I thought it was supposed to be a joke
@@mustang8206 it was a satirical role.
Nice narrations and educative good job there , Pls more of these
That Veronica Mars clip....not exactly subtle if you can be seen so clearly 🤣🤣
Exactly not rocket science right...?
Interesting to hear his honest assessment of the comparisons between PI work and law enforcement actually be a plug for their service. The bureaucracy and red tape surrounding just reporting a stolen [edit] _musical_ instrument to the police can be totally side-stepped by using a more expensive but more committed PI facility. Will keep this in mind. 😁
Am I the only one think he looks like Shrek after drinking the handsome potion?
Why is this not the top comment?! This is 100% accurate hahaha
Awwwww
The last part of the video is so accurate!
It amazes me that people think that the internet is secure...
Rumors say that he investigated while he reacted to this scenes
I will never tell
The Ace Ventura part with him ACTUALLY taking the dog seems more like a a case of opportunity and that the intention was to verify the suspect and the whether the dog could be accessible on return visits.
great content... I am a one man private investigation operation in Anchorage, Alaska.. I contract through the federal government and the state... the private cases when you surveil can get interesting.. when you know your city I think it is about anticipating their destination when tailing in your vehicle... I followed an alleged drug dealer not long ago.. it was intense situation.. the other concept I realized is that when following someone on foot or in a bar not to get in your head about them making you.. obviously you should know from your client the subject's awareness of possibly being followed.. but my point was don't overthink that because they made quick eye contact with you that you are made... anyway... I am rambling a little bit.. I have a surveillance gig here tomorrow that I am prepping
14:00 just because you can talk to whoever you want doesn't mean they have any obligation to answer your questions
I was hoping he would talk about "Monk."
Man THESE VIDEOS ARE ADDICTING 🙏😔🙏😔🙏
The problem with Sherlock's deduction is that a lot of people that are left handed train to shoot with their right. Case in point: Dr. John H. Watson.
I'm left-handed in writing but most people's assumptions about which hand I use for different things are wrong.. the only thing they know for sure is I write with my left hand.
My ex-boss had a p.i. that looked like Vicky Lawrence from Mama's Place - someone's grandma & the damnedest people would talk to her. You almost expected her to whip out a plate of cookies.
6:25 shots fired at Joe Navarro? I'd love to see a debate between the two.
HMMMM sure Ill take that bet
This was literally suggested after I watched a video of a former FBI agent talking about how to read people. The algorithm is wonderful