The Untold Story Of Charles Manson | Manson: Music from an Unsound Mind | Documentary Central

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  • Опубліковано 18 чер 2022
  • The untold story of Charles Manson’s obsession to become a rock star, his rise in the LA music scene, the celebrities who championed his music including the Beach Boys’ Dennis Wilson and his descent into violence once his dreams fell apart.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @williamanthony9090
    @williamanthony9090 Рік тому +80

    These specials always forget to mention that Manson was taught to play guitar by Alvin "Creepy" Karpis, one of the most notorious outlaws from the 1930's.

    • @pleun315
      @pleun315 Рік тому +9

      True !

    • @davidwilson5998
      @davidwilson5998 Рік тому +7

      Ma Barkers son

    • @Bigstooler0
      @Bigstooler0 Рік тому +6

      @@pressousbailey8888 Most of them. Just have to put it on pause when raiding the fridge

    • @100perdido
      @100perdido 11 місяців тому +2

      You can find Manson's recording of "Twilight Blues", written by Alvin Carpis, here on UA-cam.

    • @mateovega6442
      @mateovega6442 11 місяців тому

      @@pressousbailey8888 the Dianne Sawyer documentary actually if anyone wants to know exactly where they say it

  • @jcolterh
    @jcolterh Рік тому +59

    Finally, a documentary that covers some of nuances of the story.

    • @mikeFM76
      @mikeFM76 Рік тому +4

      Read MANSON IN HIS OWN WORDS by Nuell Emmons

  • @jvilla4760
    @jvilla4760 9 місяців тому +55

    This was a fantastic documentary. Most other docs do not focus on the music and just focus on the cult and violence. This explains so well how the rejection from the music word totally drove him off a cliff. Really appreciate the way this story is told. All of the people interviewed here actually knew him and where there for all of this at the time. Loved all of the backstory to his time in LA and how he was desperately trying to make it as a rock star.

    • @dorcelybensch998
      @dorcelybensch998 7 місяців тому

      2:24 português

    • @Jojo-vo4cu
      @Jojo-vo4cu 7 місяців тому

      Esai😂

    • @SUGAR_XYLER
      @SUGAR_XYLER 6 місяців тому +2

      He could have sent all his family out for jobs, taken their paychecks and bought his own recording studio like Berry Gordy 😂

    • @dudsbarbde9116
      @dudsbarbde9116 5 місяців тому

      The LSD "mind control" experiments done on him, and all the get out of jail free cards are what allowed this to happen. He had been doing things for years and years, it was only a matter of time before it reached this point because he wasn't being punished for all of the crimes he was doing. In fact, he was being given some of the purest LSD to ever exist, for free. Massive amounts that you couldn't believe. I mean a single gram makes 100k REGULAR doses of LSD. In powder form that's like spilling a little salt, yet if a single human consumed it WHO KNOWS what would happen to them. It doesn't just kill you in massive doses, actually I don't know of too many overdoses from LSD. Maybe heart attacks and strokes, etc.
      My point being, without the authourities doing their "jobs", and him being given every upperhanded situation ever. I mean he was a terrible criminal, why was he not in prision LONG before this happened? Because they wanted him in "normal" society to see the effects and how he acted with other humans.
      They got their answer.

    • @yaoreivashi
      @yaoreivashi 4 місяці тому +1

      Spot on. I only knew Charlie as a diabolical maniac, who's only existence are known for being a carrier criminal, never know he was such a good musician who once get along and even collaborate a band like beach boys.

  • @wolfpack9958
    @wolfpack9958 Рік тому +49

    I grew up down the hill from Spahn Ranch in Chatsworth in the late 60s early 70s. As a young kid hiking up in Chatsworth Park I never understood why older kids would say be careful or else Charlie will get you. Years later as I got older I understood why!!

  • @lauralittlemark4079
    @lauralittlemark4079 10 місяців тому +33

    great documentary... and one thing I never considered is the impact that all this story had on Dennis Wilson, who was just an innocent witness of all this madness

  • @765kvline
    @765kvline Рік тому +16

    The best documentary on this topic I have viewed. Splendid program.

  • @susannebuchholz72
    @susannebuchholz72 Рік тому +8

    Thank you very much for uploading!!👏🏻

  • @monicapatton1405
    @monicapatton1405 9 місяців тому +2

    Really enjoyed this. Very well done. Thanks for sharing!

  • @gustavopanesso7297
    @gustavopanesso7297 3 місяці тому +6

    Manson was not a hippy. He was a con artist.

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 9 днів тому

      Some hippies were con artists as well. Manson was both, and a murderer.

  • @timr31908
    @timr31908 Рік тому +26

    Charlie's home was wherever he could live for free

    • @leagueG5
      @leagueG5 9 місяців тому +2

      🤣 Best comment ever. 🏆

  • @nicholi2789
    @nicholi2789 8 місяців тому +5

    Really fascinating stuff. I found the musical background stuff especially interesting. Definitely a different angle than most of the documentaries have done.

  • @SteveGee1986
    @SteveGee1986 8 місяців тому +3

    What an amazing piece of work. Bravo

  • @dianegonzales7345
    @dianegonzales7345 7 місяців тому +12

    I remember this! I had just graduated from high school in June 1969. I lived in Orange county, Ca. This was so shocking. 🤔, I am stunned that they recently let one of the murders out of prison. They all received the death penalty but Calif overturned death penalties. They should have gotten life without parole!

    • @WilliamSmith-ex9et
      @WilliamSmith-ex9et 2 місяці тому +1

      EXACTLY. How a person goes from death penalty to walking the streets really can only happen in California.

    • @b.w.5003
      @b.w.5003 23 дні тому

      Itdoesnt just happen in California ​@WilliamSmith-ex9et

    • @John-tj4up
      @John-tj4up 17 днів тому

      ​@@b.w.5003it was California and Newsom who let out van Houten.

    • @Bloopergrandson1
      @Bloopergrandson1 17 днів тому

      They let out probably the least “worse” of the bunch (Van Houten already stabbed the victims when they were already dead).
      The worse (Atkins, Watson, Krenwinkel, Mansion) will never leave prison or already passed (Atkins and Mansion).

    • @John-tj4up
      @John-tj4up 16 днів тому

      @@Bloopergrandson1 none of them should have gotten out

  • @nicholi2789
    @nicholi2789 8 місяців тому +6

    I absolutely love the baby picture they show of Charles. Just the most nuts looking baby pic you could ever imagine lol

  • @user-js8ro2mq7e
    @user-js8ro2mq7e 2 місяці тому

    Thank you for documentation..

  • @seankelly3712
    @seankelly3712 Рік тому +32

    Very good documentary. I've seen them all and this one really spent time on the details of his attempted music career. A lot of it I knew already but a good bit of information I didn't know.
    It proved that Terry Melcher perjured himself in the trials claiming he only met Charles Manson twice.

  • @damarysdingui
    @damarysdingui Рік тому +25

    You always bring the best everytime..
    Thanks for the upload, D.C..💖

  • @thebangkokconnection4080
    @thebangkokconnection4080 Рік тому +12

    As The Manson Family fades into history for greater killings, all has been said, speculated and done. He had a great run but the followers of this story are passing away and in 10 years will be a mere footnote in history.

    • @terrenceolivido741
      @terrenceolivido741 Рік тому +4

      RIP me and you. god bless.

    • @user-tu6qz5iv8i
      @user-tu6qz5iv8i 10 місяців тому +5

      Leslie Van Houten has been released , so justice has not been served .

    • @tkcurtis1725
      @tkcurtis1725 8 місяців тому

      ....Aaaaaand????

    • @mr.sherlockholmes6130
      @mr.sherlockholmes6130 Місяць тому +1

      @@user-tu6qz5iv8i i respect you answer but Leslie is still a convicted murderer and she originally got the death penalty. So that being said she and the rest of them should have never be allowed to have a parole hearing. Sharon Tate and her unborn son Cry from their grave for justice.

  • @natashajones4798
    @natashajones4798 6 місяців тому +2

    Best documentary I've seen. it explains a lot about what really was going on behind the scenes.

  • @davidmackie8552
    @davidmackie8552 Рік тому

    Thankyou. Very interesting.

  • @gustavopanesso7297
    @gustavopanesso7297 3 місяці тому +3

    To call him a hippie is an insult. He manipulated unstable young people for his own gain's.

  • @therealdarrenlwilliams2183
    @therealdarrenlwilliams2183 7 місяців тому +6

    Charlie had a surprisingly good voice. I would never have guessed

    • @seanthedon6996
      @seanthedon6996 Місяць тому +1

      Ironically, his music was actually kind of beautiful 🤷🏼🤷🏼

    • @mardrettekemp7182
      @mardrettekemp7182 Місяць тому +1

      He had talent. I liked one of his songs Look at Your Game Girl.

    • @seanthedon6996
      @seanthedon6996 Місяць тому +1

      @@mardrettekemp7182 Hell ya! Look at your game, girl and home is where you're happy. Those 2 are my favorite

    • @motives88
      @motives88 29 днів тому

      @@mardrettekemp7182 that isnt him singing it on the uploads now

  • @8thApostle
    @8thApostle 5 місяців тому

    Dope doc🗽💯

  • @shooterdown_5615
    @shooterdown_5615 6 місяців тому +5

    Sharon Tate was a female rising 26 year old Hollywood star who was well known for her beauty. she is of English, Swiss, and French descent. She could be described by her friends and family as a gentle-hearted woman with her outside beauty equally matching her inside.

  • @jpalberthoward9
    @jpalberthoward9 Рік тому +9

    Phil Kaufman was the guy who stole Gram Parsons and cremated him in the desert. He went on to manage Emmylou Harris.
    Bobby Beausoleil took over the soundtrack for Kenneth Anger's "Lucifer Rising" when Jimmy Page got too whacked on heroin to complete the job.
    Manson and a couple of his cohorts tried to crash Frank Zappa's house, and he ran them off.
    Neil Young praised Charlie's music until the murders.
    Quite a curious little circle of characters.
    The Army's movie and media complex was located in Laurel Canyon, They had production facilities for movies, television, music and anything else you could want. It was used to make training films and other media during WW2.
    Right smack in the middle of the counterculture revolution.

  • @joshuadurham1257
    @joshuadurham1257 Рік тому

    Great video.

  • @finarollerz
    @finarollerz Рік тому +5

    Most pull back focus I’ve seen yet. Very well done.

  • @vanessacollins9434
    @vanessacollins9434 Рік тому +8

    This was such a fascinating documentary thanks for sharing

    • @captainape6807
      @captainape6807 Рік тому +1

      Check out the vid Charles Manson Superstar. That is even more interesting.

  • @thomasgriffiths6758
    @thomasgriffiths6758 Рік тому +15

    I like that description of the Beach Boy's music "a brochure of a lifestyle" I think the same can be said about Jimmy Buffett and Florida.

    • @douglasbell8408
      @douglasbell8408 Рік тому

      Pet Sounds is a lot more than that. Listen.

    • @thomasgriffiths6758
      @thomasgriffiths6758 Рік тому +1

      I have and you are correct.
      The Beach boys were the first concert I ever saw early 1980s.
      Kennedy Stadium Central High School Bridgeport Connecticut.

  • @jess00821
    @jess00821 21 день тому

    Very fascinating documentary.

  • @donnydonnybrook8131
    @donnydonnybrook8131 Рік тому +59

    If you understand the trash cans in the alley, you understand Hollywood - Charles Manson

    • @John-tj4up
      @John-tj4up 17 днів тому

      What does that mean? More of Manson's bullsh-t.

  • @kathrynpertz7384
    @kathrynpertz7384 9 місяців тому +3

    Really good at explaining and connecting the dots of this madman....nice job

  • @cincinnatipedalsteel4347
    @cincinnatipedalsteel4347 Рік тому +32

    Great documentary but I hated that they muted out some music for some reason.

    • @zenmothermagick
      @zenmothermagick Рік тому +6

      Agreed. I thought it was an issue with my audio until I came to the comments

    • @waden404
      @waden404 Рік тому +8

      I didnt mind, because after i heard the first couple.....man were they horrible

    • @AndyGaudet
      @AndyGaudet Рік тому +5

      Automatically Muted for Copyright Issues (with certain songs). As this is a documentary, they should've got this taken care of but it's not a very easy process from what I hear.

    • @joshwesley5789
      @joshwesley5789 Рік тому +5

      Trademark infringement bud.

    • @seanthedon6996
      @seanthedon6996 Місяць тому

      ​@@waden404horrible??? Cmon man seriously? I think his music was actually pretty damn good.

  • @frederickmcdougall3734
    @frederickmcdougall3734 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely f'n fascinating.

  • @stevenhanson6057
    @stevenhanson6057 6 місяців тому +2

    He was like, “Record my songs, or I’ll cut

  • @kreh1100
    @kreh1100 Рік тому +32

    It's good to see the story from a different prospective. I enjoyed this very much.

    • @Kristian179
      @Kristian179 Рік тому +3

      it's sorta from a different perspective but layered with the myth of Helter Skelter

    • @Kristian179
      @Kristian179 Рік тому +1

      @Juxtaposition Stories huh?

    • @Kristian179
      @Kristian179 Рік тому +1

      @Juxtaposition Stories adult whom, plus you make so sense at all, to you I bid adieu.

    • @gaylehudson7267
      @gaylehudson7267 Рік тому +3

      Very different. Removed from reality.

  • @BillySBC
    @BillySBC Рік тому +167

    Charlie was a career criminal way before he ever wound up in California, so to say it was all about his music dreams disintegrating isn't quite true.

    • @iolitelight
      @iolitelight Рік тому +21

      Those murders probably wouldn't have happened if his connections to Terry Melcher and Brian Wilson had led to a music career. But yes, he had spent more years in jail than out when he was released and moved to California. In fact he had told them not to let him out, that he could not function in society.

    • @lesleyboulant4053
      @lesleyboulant4053 Рік тому +22

      That’s like saying, “if Hitler were allowed into art school he wouldn’t have caused the holocaust”

    • @lesleyboulant4053
      @lesleyboulant4053 Рік тому

      …and flat-out, his music sucked. Perhaps if he had talent, he wouldn’t have caused a murder spree? F&@$ that guy AND his failed dreams.

    • @Deathadder1994
      @Deathadder1994 Рік тому +8

      @@lesleyboulant4053 😂😂😂😂😂😂 Brilliant

    • @Deathadder1994
      @Deathadder1994 Рік тому +13

      @@iolitelight I don’t think Charlie ever had a stable life and given his record he done petty crimes constantly and was always doing things to ruin himself, The same would apply even if he did become a musician he would of self destructed once again

  • @jgrave10
    @jgrave10 Рік тому +6

    Very informative... Well done!

  • @tommyandrews4992
    @tommyandrews4992 Рік тому +2

    Why was "look at your game girl" muted out and other songs weren't? 45:23

  • @damilkk
    @damilkk Рік тому +6

    It's a hame this documentary doesn't mention Terry Melchers visit to the ranch post-Tate murders.

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi Рік тому +60

    Very well produced and accurate. I was sleeping in my VW van in Topanga Canyon the night of the Tate murders. My parents had just kicked me out of the house for smoking weed. I was 18 and looking for a place to rent. Man was that a shocker.

    • @Truthall
      @Truthall Рік тому +3

      YOU ARE A LIAR, THAT INVESTIGATION WENT NOWHERE FOR MONTHS

    • @MeeMee-gz5vp
      @MeeMee-gz5vp Рік тому +2

      Kicked out for smoking weed? Sheesh sounds like your parents were overly strict.

    • @clarkewi
      @clarkewi Рік тому +9

      @@MeeMee-gz5vp A different era.

    • @johnluckett3573
      @johnluckett3573 Рік тому +3

      I believe you,and you're story and I'm happy for you that you didn't get mixed up with that family of Killers

    • @davidhallett8783
      @davidhallett8783 Рік тому

      @@MeeMee-gz5vp do you kids REALLY think nothing happened before you were born
      That things have always been as fucked up as they are now. I m GLAD to be going to die BEFORE there s no more food or clean water

  • @shellyfinkelstein7964
    @shellyfinkelstein7964 2 місяці тому +1

    29:13 what song is playing in the background?

  • @gregoryzischke1843
    @gregoryzischke1843 7 місяців тому +2

    He couldn't even tune that guitar, let alone play the thing. And as a music lover, how dare you call that hack a
    Singer!

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 9 днів тому

      Standards today aren't very high. What can you expect?

  • @bellyQBE
    @bellyQBE Рік тому +19

    Every so often someone takes this story off the shelf, shines it up with brand new bs and puts it back out there for us to enjoy.

    • @ht2007
      @ht2007 Рік тому +1

      Good perspective

    • @Juxtaposition1-Bitchute
      @Juxtaposition1-Bitchute Рік тому +1

      ua-cam.com/video/oC8vU4UNW_0/v-deo.html

    • @davidgolden1726
      @davidgolden1726 Рік тому +2

      Yup!, all a person needs to do is listen to the interview of the people convicted of the murders to get the non BS truth about what really happened, it's mostly here on UA-cam.

    • @Juxtaposition1-Bitchute
      @Juxtaposition1-Bitchute Рік тому +1

      @@davidgolden1726 CIA Poppycock is the Manson cover-up of a NATO Military bayonet attack. My Lai in Benedict Canyon on a Hollywood CIA porn set.

  • @ht2007
    @ht2007 Рік тому +15

    They say Charlie was "the most dangerous killer in America." He was no one special, he wasn't any worse than any other killer from that era. Charles Manson really never killed anyone by his own hands but he did convince others to kill. He was only considered "the most dangerous man in America" because he killed a famous actress. If he didn't kill Sharon Tate we probably wouldn't even know who he is today.

    • @wanderer299a
      @wanderer299a Рік тому +4

      She wasn't that famous at the time.

    • @ht2007
      @ht2007 Рік тому +5

      @@wanderer299a no not really, I agree. But her husband was and I guarantee she was more famous then you and I would ever be. She was way above the average man and the media can make money off of that, in fact, they think "the more famous the better." And "she's as good as they can get" at the time.

    • @chucklowery2314
      @chucklowery2314 Рік тому +3

      He did kill himself, maybe not the people he was tried for but he was a killer

    • @gabrielherrera5289
      @gabrielherrera5289 Рік тому +3

      He didn't kill Sharon Tate

    • @tinaschultz9371
      @tinaschultz9371 Рік тому +5

      Thanks for your participation in taking blame away from Tex Watson.

  • @megaqueenbee7421
    @megaqueenbee7421 5 місяців тому +1

    I was born in 1967 and grew up with this whole thing and Im here to tell you no one I know I grew up with automatically associates Dennis Wilson with Manson it was very unfortunate that they met
    But I still revere and love the Beach Boys !!! !!!

  • @wesbodine6102
    @wesbodine6102 Рік тому +18

    I remember hearing a story about him spitting on a guard and the guard opened his cell and worked him over with a billy club, the guard said he never spit on him again and acted really nice towards him LMFAO

    • @jamesdeangelo8166
      @jamesdeangelo8166 Рік тому

      That's because they were both criminals. I wish Charlie had gotten out and visited the man's family.

  • @riokriok2863
    @riokriok2863 4 місяці тому

    well done documentary Bravo

  • @orestes1984
    @orestes1984 Рік тому +55

    This is one of the best documentaries I've ever seen on the Manson Family. It makes Once Upon a Time in Holywood look like a joke. The joke was how many questions were left unanswered for people who didn't grow up in Holywood or even California.

    • @EastSide-qc5oy
      @EastSide-qc5oy Рік тому +41

      Well its important to keep in mind that Tarantino’s film wasn’t meant to be a documentary or bio pic about the Manson Family. It wasn’t even meant to be the core focus. It was somewhat of a subplot that was meant to be interwoven into the main plot of Rick and Cliff and the changing landscape of Hollywood at the time, with the added feature of a plot twist with a wish fulfillment for an alternate ending to a real life historical event. You didn’t have to grow up in California to be familiar with the Manson stuff. It was an international media story. But younger viewers would be less apt to be aware of it. Possibly Tarantino assumes those who are interested
      would seek out the history which is all over the internet and countless books and other movies and tv shows.

    • @orestes1984
      @orestes1984 Рік тому

      @@EastSide-qc5oy I’m not old enough to be aware of Manson as anyone who professed to being a neo Nazi by carving it into his head in prison.
      What this documentary does well is normalises how Manson got to that point through mental defect and how if he were treated more kindly by the music industry (where he eventually lost the plot) he could have been a different person.
      There are three types in terms of policing this out… “mad, bad and sad.”
      Charles Manson didn’t start out as mad. He’s a case where the system took a sad person chewed them out (in this case in the Hollywood machine) and made him mad (insane).
      I don’t think after watching this documentary that anyone could say Manson was a mad man from the beginning… maybe a little eccentric and a tiny bit utopian but not a mad man. It took the machine to make Manson truely mad.
      I think we created the Manson family and with all created madness (in the nurturing department) society is at least a little responsible for the result.
      I'm not romanticising what he became (probably from one to many LSD trips actually). I think behind every villain there is a story.
      I feel sad for the facts that no one intervened or showed him enough love. He clearly found a passion in prison the first few times with music. If you listen to the whole song he wrote that is featured in this movie:
      "Look at ya game girl" (it's on Spotify)
      There is something raw there (he crosses over boundaries, into the areas of Bob Dylan, mixed with Frank Sinatra, and The Eagles, off the top of my head) I come from a musical family.
      He has a talent for music that could have saved his life. Instead as per usual. The producers in Holywood made fun of him and he lashed out in the only way he knew how, by picking public figures and getting his cult family to kill them.
      That in itself is a sad story of degenerate madness... Charles Manson had a rare kind of "mystique" about him and he ruined it in his madness... If we dug around in the closets of any rock star at the time including the most softly of spoken Eric Clapton there is a little Charles Manson in him also. At this time Clapton would have been knocking shoulders with Jimmy Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, and Jimmy Page. That's how easy it is. Eric Clapton would have been shooting up copious amounts of drugs with his band members from Cream. That's what the song "Sunshine of your life" is actually about... the acid houses, acid rock, which eventually would lead to an entire genre called "acid house."
      I'm not apologising, I'm just stating what the music industry, and stardom continues to do to people. I can see exactly why growing up in a musical family in Australia with my dad who has played with everyone from the whose who, including Billy Joel and the Aztecs of Australian notoriety, met the guitarist from Cold Chisel and so on, exactly how this madness develops.
      I know many people like this... unfortunately it's usually the ones the machine spits out, and where they can't handle the pain of being a "reject."
      If I dig deeply enough I am three steps away from introducing you to everyone in Hollywood like Manson. Through Richard Norton, I could probably get you an introduction through Richard Norton (Mad Max Fury Road) to Chuck Norris. But I don't need to.... I have my own ways and I am now interested in sociology not rehashing the 1960s or the 1970s when it comes to music. My dad was a security guard, a sessions artist (played backing guitar with some of the best), and knew of how to get me introduced to practically anyone. But I don't live in the lime light of that old news.
      My family could introduce me to the entirety of the music industry because Richard Norton who trained as a security guard in Australia was bodyguard to Linda Rondstat and at one point Abba also, that's how Richard Norton got his name in Holywood. The thing is... He had enough talent as a stunt man alongside Jackie Chan, and Chuck Norris to cut out some what of a name for himself to make money... If you go down to the main strip of Holywood all of these people bump shoulders with each other all the time. To me it's almost on the level of the incestuous cesspit that is the British Royal Family (Hollywood that is), I don't want to go there... I just want to understand why.
      I've seen people like Manson thousands of times before in the industry. It just makes me sad that the machine chews out people with some kind of talent... again and again and again... I KNOW personally many talented "Manson's" who blew their own head off (metaphorically) with drugs. It's unfortunate that's what stardom and it's attraction does in the face of "the machine."
      Where this story ends is where new sounds people like Eric Clapton and Cream were creating... "where the sun never shines" in the white (injecting room). "Such a sad time at the station." Where these people's lives eventually fell apart trying to be another Manson... The white lights and black lights near the station, tired starlings, met together to shoot up drugs, take acid tabs, and try to be famous.
      "No strings attached right?"
      Cream - White Room.

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 Рік тому +13

      Tarantino makes entertainment movies

    • @karmarose6332
      @karmarose6332 Рік тому +9

      I really wish that they would have made it very clear that 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' was a work of fiction.
      Edit: I suppose enough time has passed to call 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' a historical fiction.

    • @danicarae5137
      @danicarae5137 Рік тому +11

      Once Upon a Time in Hollywood was not meant to be a documentary. It was fiction based on real events.

  • @Road_Rash
    @Road_Rash Рік тому +3

    That pic of a young Ernest Knapp looks so much like Heath Ledger, he could be his father...

  • @Justins-handle
    @Justins-handle Рік тому +1

    29:20 in this what song is playing?

  • @dancalmpeaceful3903
    @dancalmpeaceful3903 Рік тому +28

    Crafty, charismatic preacher......yup...same description as Jim Jones......and we all know who THAT was....

    • @tedpeterson1156
      @tedpeterson1156 Рік тому

      Same as Leary - on the payroll. They were all on some kind of spook shit chemical weapons program first run out of Mkultra thru the universities and prisons in the 1950s.
      Then they rolled it out in San Francisco in the 1960s. Strange, but true. Ted Kaczinski aka "Unabomber" incidentally was another participant (or victim).

    • @dancalmpeaceful3903
      @dancalmpeaceful3903 Рік тому +2

      @@tedpeterson1156 Yeah...I did in fact hear that about Ted K. A bit scary when you think about it. I"m going to assume, all this is a bit off base, that you have seen the original "Manchurian Candidate" with Sinatra ...correct?

    • @nicoletrandel2966
      @nicoletrandel2966 Рік тому +1

      Ya pure EVIL

    • @billgatesleavingyamomshous8177
      @billgatesleavingyamomshous8177 Рік тому

      He makes terrible kool aid

    • @user-dj6hu9gq4t
      @user-dj6hu9gq4t 4 місяці тому

      Sounds like IQ45. And his orange minions

  • @indiandaeng
    @indiandaeng Рік тому +76

    Charlie was a hack guitar player that knew 3 chords, his voice was decent. Melcher and others tried to steer him into saleable material but Charlie would not listen. Like most cons he thought he was smarter than the professionals. He brought women in who chanted, played tambourines, bells ect out of time. If he had real musicians doing the music he may have gotten a contract which did not take much in the 60s. Charlie always was his own worst enemy, usually by what came out of his mouth.

    • @Mozart1220
      @Mozart1220 Рік тому +5

      I have a CD of Charlies Music. He had SOME game, but yeah, he needed a producer.

    • @roxannemoser
      @roxannemoser Рік тому +8

      3 chores invented punk. Had Charlie waited a decade, he could've made a decent living. He would've been a little old to start, but I can see Johnny Rotten working with him. He was institutionalized. He couldn't go a decade without committing a crime.

    • @oldaccount5217
      @oldaccount5217 Рік тому

      I guess you would know. You say a lot of stupid shit.

    • @fuckyougoogle2764
      @fuckyougoogle2764 Рік тому

      Disagree here, without expertise. I heard him play diminished and augmented chords, and came by them in a way that links harmonically to the post war period jazz/pop like Woody Hermann and Bing Crosby. I suspect the girls narrowed his harmonic scope, and he abandoned previous structures. I'm gleaning from multiple documentaries and books that Charles Manson had written publishable music, lyrics and accompaniment in the late 50s/early 60s.

    • @PercheronAppLVR
      @PercheronAppLVR Рік тому +1

      Pfft

  • @sickcrimeinc
    @sickcrimeinc Рік тому +10

    He's Master of Mass Manipulation, on the scale of 1-10, he's 11 (surpass the scale) that even the comment section is on his tangled web

  • @twhite8308
    @twhite8308 Місяць тому

    Wow. Thanks for telling this story. I've wondered what happened. I just didn't tie the cultural changes to the Manson murders.

  • @jude999
    @jude999 Рік тому +2

    "I saw the handwriting on the cell block."

  • @icarusairways6139
    @icarusairways6139 Рік тому +23

    The generation which brought you Charles Manson now walks the halls of our government.

    • @Sunflower-ug3eh
      @Sunflower-ug3eh Рік тому

      You are 100% right. The government did a perfect job of creating a lunatic, drug addicted, sleezy, ignorant culture of people who had zero morals. The people who indulged in the hippie BS were the same freaks destroying our country today. Look around at the warped mess and who is running it. They were the people perpetuating the destruction or morality in this country. Bill & Killery Clinton are one example, Bill sat in a tree for a week on a campus and shit on the ground so bad that the fire dept. was coming out to hose it down. FREAKS ! Look at them all drugged out and dancing around like freaks having an epileptic seizure, they should have nuked them and their Sexually transmitted diseases. The VD clinics were overloaded!
      Much of the behavior of these people is written in the 45 goals of communism to destroy America. It is horrifying to see what they have done to this nation. We are ALL in trouble and there are a few who don't see it and what danger they are in.
      *

    • @naelyneurkopfen9741
      @naelyneurkopfen9741 Рік тому

      And they've managed to poison the minds of a couple more generations.

    • @pleun315
      @pleun315 Рік тому

      You sound like Sandra good....

    • @halfrutter2226
      @halfrutter2226 Рік тому +3

      …and we’re your teachers, clergy, artists, writers and celebrities!😅

    • @halfrutter2226
      @halfrutter2226 Рік тому

      @DankBeans you’re an age bigot. And, we’re living longer than ever while your generation keeps finding new drugs to kill yourselves with! 🥱😊

  • @mehdisalehani
    @mehdisalehani Рік тому +4

    I'm curious, how do they know so much details about even what song choice he had as a kid when he was playing? It's really strange...

    • @AstheSpiritLeads
      @AstheSpiritLeads Рік тому

      Because its fabricated- Biggest public frame up I'm aware of. Look up Tom O'Neill.

  • @krystle4248
    @krystle4248 9 місяців тому

    Im with you 💯 on your sentiment.
    However that loop would not be that hard to remember LIKE AT ALL, if he was someone that is like your dad and this is nor al for him to do, as he had 3 ish months there.
    I honestly think anyone or a lit of people would know that horse shoe route just being there for a little bit.
    Because when you move to a new place you go explore it a bit, even and often especially post COVID.
    And im from the PNW and knownthe area.
    When your in Pullman, after driving around there for 20 minutes you would head to Moscow ID drive around there for 20 minutes and then you would want to go a different way back to Pullman where you live so you would go south and then take the exact route he took as the main most obvious one if you didnt want to go to crazy far and were just driving the main loop heading south and wanting to get back to Pullman. Yes I know there are a few ways to do a shorter loop. But its just the main way I woukd go if I was new to Pullman and wanted to go out for a drive.

  • @First.Last.99
    @First.Last.99 Рік тому +2

    Had no idea this was the real story WHY it happened. Thx

    • @thebangkokconnection4080
      @thebangkokconnection4080 Рік тому

      Tex got word a drug shipment was being delivered to the Tate house from his mobbed up old pot suppliers at the vending machine company and he was going to steal the drugs, money or both so Charlie could get Bobby out of jail for the Hinman murder. Charlie was paranoid Bobby would rat him out.

    • @First.Last.99
      @First.Last.99 Рік тому

      @@thebangkokconnection4080 amazing insigth, never knew these connections, thx

  • @robertafierro5592
    @robertafierro5592 Рік тому +5

    Now we see or hear of crimes like this everyday..but back then, this was BIG NEWS..

    • @PAULLONDEN
      @PAULLONDEN Рік тому

      Yèh ....."God's Own Country" two allowed political parties , both dancing to the pipes of the Pentagon , built on genocide of its original inhabitants , endless imperialist wars, propping up military regimes , serial killers galore.......Seems karma is about to present its ultimate bill. Dragging the rest of the world down with it.

  • @goldieryun-or1zv
    @goldieryun-or1zv 11 місяців тому +10

    I think Charlie had a good singing voice. As good as some of the famous people. But he was his own enemy. And I don't think he was anywhere near as crazy as he wanted to lead people to believe.i believe he could have been an amazing person. But he went the wrong way and people lost their lives as a result.

    • @CyberBullyBeatmaker
      @CyberBullyBeatmaker 6 місяців тому +2

      I agree 100% for 3 reasons:
      1: He didn’t do the killing himself and organized it
      2: he knew better than to mess with the black panther
      3: He convinced ppl to eat food out of a dump.
      Crazy ppl like he tried to portray to be couldn’t accomplish any of that

    • @riokriok2863
      @riokriok2863 4 місяці тому

      Very bright man on wrong side what waist of his life

  • @roberto0561
    @roberto0561 10 місяців тому +2

    In August 1968 , ELVIS performs his comeback special on the NBC which really puts him back on the map . No bloody mention of that , just saying.

  • @fwmyeejkha22
    @fwmyeejkha22 Рік тому +2

    Music? Yea right 👍.... them girl need a head check permanently 😂 LMAO

  • @KidFreshie
    @KidFreshie Рік тому +16

    I'm convinced the narrator was purposefully seeing how many mispronounced words he could slip into this documentary.

  • @goldieryun-or1zv
    @goldieryun-or1zv 11 місяців тому +5

    Charlie had a very good singing voice. Just need some songs to fit him and arranged by professionals . He was very handsome back in the day

    • @roberto0561
      @roberto0561 10 місяців тому +2

      You better be a female

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      @donnaturner9762 9 місяців тому

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    • @monicapatton1405
      @monicapatton1405 9 місяців тому

      ⁠@@roberto0561what difference does that make? 😂

    • @Jojo-vo4cu
      @Jojo-vo4cu 7 місяців тому

      😘😘😘

    • @freebee8221
      @freebee8221 4 місяці тому +1

      Look at your game girl IS a very good song. Gnr did a cover of it. I think Charlie had a good voice and he wrote good lyrics but his guitar playing sucked. But yeah i think he couldve made it as a famous musician.but then again we are all lucky that he wasnt more famous coz then his cult wouldve been wayyyyy bigger and they couldve killed more people.

  • @DonovanWert
    @DonovanWert Рік тому

    Awesome 😎 thanks brother!!🙏

  • @tommyboyfitness
    @tommyboyfitness Рік тому +1

    They got a lot of this wrong but I do appreciate some of the videos and some of the pictures and a few things they got right.

  • @Deepbluecat
    @Deepbluecat Рік тому +11

    29:36 Guy's got the dope ass moves!

  • @pleun315
    @pleun315 Рік тому +27

    When you think you Saw it all and know it all, there Will always be a new book, video or movie, details, theories, members speaking etc. There Will never be a Final word about the family and what happend...

  • @mattjones5987
    @mattjones5987 3 місяці тому

    I take it there are copyright issues with playing back a few of these music clips?

  • @Nature_guurrll
    @Nature_guurrll 10 місяців тому +1

    If Charles was so spiritual, he would known that if he wasn’t attached to the outcome of getting a recording contract, he most likely would have behaved in such a way that he would have gotten that contract.

  • @hopecarr9871
    @hopecarr9871 10 місяців тому +3

    People that say he was just evil, or just it for revenge, or just a killer... I'm sorry but there's so much more to it that I honestly can & can't understand. I think the part I can't is what draws me back to it

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 10 місяців тому +1

      That's what Master manipulators do, basically he was trolling the establishment because of how they treated him as a youth, and early adult. He spent more time in jail than free

    • @ADG.Est.1988
      @ADG.Est.1988 10 місяців тому +1

      He was an alleged member of the Process Church. Which was an offshoot of the Church of scientology. Research the process church and align the doctrine with his philosophy. The parallels are crazy. He was under some sort of mind control. Just my opinion

    • @mplslawnguy3389
      @mplslawnguy3389 10 місяців тому

      He was secretly Roman Polanski's power bottom sidepiece. He grew more jealous of Sharon and exacted his revenge. It's nothing but a jilted lover story of revenge.

    • @lorenzopiscosi9566
      @lorenzopiscosi9566 10 місяців тому

      @@shable1436he deserved any year of that

  • @CyberBullyBeatmaker
    @CyberBullyBeatmaker 6 місяців тому +10

    Manson wasn’t anything more than a Ohio born pimp with a pretty singing voice😂

    • @John-tj4up
      @John-tj4up 17 днів тому

      "Pretty singing voice"? What happened to you?

    • @CyberBullyBeatmaker
      @CyberBullyBeatmaker 17 днів тому

      @@John-tj4up not what your trying to insinuate. Just because something may have happened to you don’t mean it goes for everyone else, stop mirroring

    • @John-tj4up
      @John-tj4up 17 днів тому

      @@CyberBullyBeatmaker mirroring? WTF are you talking about you assh-le? Keep your silly jargon to yourself.

    • @John-tj4up
      @John-tj4up 17 днів тому

      @@CyberBullyBeatmaker@Bully -- I'm not insinuating. I'm telling you, pantywaist.

  • @jeffharper9854
    @jeffharper9854 Рік тому +2

    I can't remember any mention of Neil Diamond in anything I've read.

  • @LeniDell
    @LeniDell Рік тому +1

    Funny, The Beatles wrote Helter Skelter about an amusement park ride lol.

  • @thomasgriffiths6758
    @thomasgriffiths6758 Рік тому +11

    I live in New Haven Connecticut and there used to be a record store called Rhyme's records and I remember when I was in my late teens in the late eighties going into that store and seeing a Manson album for sale who knows if it was a bootleg or an original or what have you but it was there and maybe I should have bought it for a collector's item.

    • @wanderer299a
      @wanderer299a Рік тому +4

      CDs are readily available.

    • @josephwimmer8546
      @josephwimmer8546 Рік тому +5

      I owned the same album. It was given to me. God 🤣 knows what happened to it

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 10 місяців тому

      Record companies just trying to exploit the murders and fame of the weird ass cultists from 60s, it was a novelty recording

  • @briankistner4331
    @briankistner4331 Рік тому +5

    Untold story? There's nothing new here that hasn't been mentioned in other stories about the Manson Family.

  • @johnnyman9513
    @johnnyman9513 Рік тому +13

    bullshittles jeff guin, how is having a uncle that beats you and makes you wear a dress to school "loving and caring" along with his mum and everyone else around him when he was a boy

    • @January.
      @January. Рік тому +2

      *an uncle

    • @emmabovary1228
      @emmabovary1228 Рік тому +2

      His grandmother and numerous other relatives were not abusive and uncaring. Even Charlie admits, his grandmother was an honest, Christian woman

    • @johnnyman9513
      @johnnyman9513 Рік тому +1

      @@emmabovary1228 yes she was the only one that was good to him but he wasnt around her for long.

    • @klina7645
      @klina7645 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, he was shuffled around various relatives while his mother was in prison. Maybe some of them were ok, but the uncle was said to be physically and emotionally abusive, forcing him to go to school dressed as a girl.

  • @MERLINtheMagicMan
    @MERLINtheMagicMan Рік тому +5

    It was Music and Drugs that fueled this insanity!!
    RIP all victims!! ❤️

  • @theonlyzachery_
    @theonlyzachery_ Рік тому +25

    If he wasn’t so nuts he could’ve Probly had a music career

    • @Dom_721
      @Dom_721 Рік тому

      He was an MKULTRA experimentee while in federal prison.....ZERO chance of being a musician

    • @cynthiasmith6465
      @cynthiasmith6465 Рік тому +6

      Not a chance.

    • @theonlyzachery_
      @theonlyzachery_ Рік тому +1

      @@cynthiasmith6465 we’ll never know now will we

    • @jameseverett4976
      @jameseverett4976 9 днів тому

      Alot of people got even further than he did, and still didn't end up with music careers.

  • @williamwray9454
    @williamwray9454 6 місяців тому

    the fact you mute the songs tells me alot about the person muting it

  • @dougstyles
    @dougstyles Рік тому +10

    People followed this guy around and worshipped him? If I saw him I'd gently put my hand on my sidearm.

    • @davidhallett8783
      @davidhallett8783 Рік тому +2

      Don t let him touch you. He hasn t washed his hands in 31 years. The girls too

    • @alexsingleton907
      @alexsingleton907 Рік тому +4

      Watch out, we got a badass over here.

    • @dougstyles
      @dougstyles Рік тому +1

      @@alexsingleton907 Yeap. A badass that would drop that filthy hippie.

    • @Jojo-vo4cu
      @Jojo-vo4cu 7 місяців тому

      Write something witchy😘😘😘Just like Charlie said, hun😂👏👋😘

  • @WilliamSmith-ex9et
    @WilliamSmith-ex9et Рік тому +4

    I almost skipped this thinking it would just be the same old stuff over and over but this has lots of new information for me! And I thought I’ve heard it all.

    • @Hanzey1966
      @Hanzey1966 Рік тому

      @William Smith Lots of New Information ?? Like What ??

    • @WilliamSmith-ex9et
      @WilliamSmith-ex9et Рік тому

      @@Hanzey1966 like I didn’t know, Manson was trying to put a group together and they actually played a gig with the one guitarist.

    • @tommoyer4697
      @tommoyer4697 Рік тому +1

      I think it is a new perspective dove deeper into the music aspect. I've never seen a lot of these interviews from those who were there

    • @WilliamSmith-ex9et
      @WilliamSmith-ex9et 2 місяці тому

      @@tommoyer4697 yes it delves much deeper into the Dennis Wilson aspect on a rewatch I’m noticing that.

  • @stephaniewest2716
    @stephaniewest2716 Рік тому +29

    Biggest conspiracy, and im not a conspiracy theorist person, but this is more than what we were told. Totally worth the research

    • @ducksinarowpatience3670
      @ducksinarowpatience3670 Рік тому +2

      Be a conspiracy analyst.

    • @johnjames5712
      @johnjames5712 Рік тому

      Tom O'Neill DID A very WELL researched book were he was able to get hold of a bunch of the declassified CIA files from MK-Ultras operation kaios and was able to PROVE that mansion was involved in the CIA and mk ultras mind control program which is also why mansion was able to stay out of jail after his last stint in and would always get released after he was in the program. He was taught how to control people like he did. and one really stunning thing Tom O'Neill was able to also find was a guy who was a CIA informant that was keeping an eye on the Manson family and hanging at the ranch who know about the state murder plot but had to stay silent and let it play out so he would not blow his cover as a CIA agent. The cia wanted Manson to get people to go on a murder spree so they could end the hippy and anti-war movement and it sure worked cause the Manson killings painted a bad picture to the public about all the "peace-loving hippies after the trials... if anyone is interested at all about the truth Tom O'Neill lays put a very well done case about all that was going on in the 60s "Tom O'Neill CHAOS: The Charles Manson, The CIA & The 60s" --->>> ua-cam.com/video/WkTO3E89RHE/v-deo.html

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 10 місяців тому +2

      If you dip toe in, might as well jump head first, because you're going to experience a bunch of nuts, but also legit rabbit holes, some you don't want to go down.

    • @pressousbailey8888
      @pressousbailey8888 10 місяців тому +1

      No, I'm sorry but you're mistaken no conspiracies. Charles was filled with a lifetime of pain, anger, loneliness growing up, abandonment and resentment all bottled up inside. He had the worst beginnings in life and endured extreme abuse both sexual and physical and he had to suffer this alone. His social skills were not as good as some might think but he was good at speaking due to all the books he read while in prison. He had a very short fuse and a deep need to be relevant as he felt he was unlovable due to his mother's abandonment of him. He didn't know how to resolve conflict because he was never shown and he didn't know how to handle anything negative . His reaction to anything that didn't go his way was to explode and not know how to channel his emotions. Things that most people can rationalize sent him over the top. It's no surprise he did the things he did growing up nor is it suprising he had such a deep anger/hate inside but he chose to fuel that anger and he chose to try and bring as many as he could into his world because he didn't want to be alone and he wanted to make sure it was known how much he had suffered unfairly and he also wanted others to feel pain as he did. No doubt he wasnt given a fair start in life but he still chose to do the things he did. He had no sympathy, empathy, or concern for anyone as he didn't know how and therefore he felt nothing for anything.. The story is tragic all the way around from beginning to end. He chose to facilitate and the others chose to follow. RIP victims.

  • @Hanzey1966
    @Hanzey1966 Рік тому

    The Untold Story Of Charles Manson ?? UNTOLD ?? Man I heard & Read this all a Million Times over . . .

  • @user-zx2zg1lm5f
    @user-zx2zg1lm5f 7 місяців тому

    Good Morning Spike Wilner..Thanks NYPD

  • @Occupied_South
    @Occupied_South Рік тому +18

    Love how they try to redeem his grotesque character at the end. This is where "peace and love" gets you.

    • @PAULLONDEN
      @PAULLONDEN Рік тому +1

      *@Miss Scarlet* "try to redeem"...??......You forgot to put that in between brackets too ?

    • @sheilastutz6436
      @sheilastutz6436 Рік тому +3

      DNA PLAYS A BIG ROLE IN AN ENVIRONMENT. HEALTH MATTERS TOO, RAISE HEALTHY CHILDREN!

    • @Jojo-vo4cu
      @Jojo-vo4cu 7 місяців тому

      Then write something witchy, just like Charlie said😘😘😘

    • @jaydeecee1643
      @jaydeecee1643 2 місяці тому

      He was obviously a psychopath....with the satanists at his ranch....I'm sure he was demonic in the end. Funny...no one mentions that. It had NOTHING to do with the hippie movement....quite the opposite! These types of people prey on the innocent!!

  • @Alyssa_Ramos_
    @Alyssa_Ramos_ 6 місяців тому +5

    This made me realize, that if they gave him a recording contract, no one would've been murdered, there never would've been a cult, and Charles Manson would be known for something good,

    • @8thApostle
      @8thApostle 5 місяців тому +1

      Homes would of been a psychedelic Rockstar 😅

  • @ellenpeel2346
    @ellenpeel2346 8 місяців тому

    Very sad

  • @sheilastutz6436
    @sheilastutz6436 6 місяців тому

    As far as isolating people for whatever kind of business, this trick is also done by people who are a branch of the law, and not always for the most sincere or greatest purposes!

  • @timr31908
    @timr31908 Рік тому +3

    If his parole officer would have been working and doing his job Charlie was at least breaking his parole 10 times everyday and that's no s***

    • @klina7645
      @klina7645 Рік тому +2

      Yeah, I don't know WTF his parole officer was smoking. Manson constantly and repeatedly violated the conditions of his parole, and yet his parole officer always got the charges dropped or ignored the violations. (Same with Susan Atkins' parole officer.) Why did it seem like Manson had an all-access pass to basically do whatever he wanted? It seems the parole officer is at least partially to blame for the murders.

  • @Dustinpool87
    @Dustinpool87 Рік тому +3

    Government don't like what you say they imprison you for life

  • @thornil2231
    @thornil2231 Рік тому +1

    and the abject you tube copyright bs in the middle of the video.

  • @crystallee4428
    @crystallee4428 4 місяці тому

    My ex-husband's step dad (hells angel) was friends with Manson. He always referred to him as "Charming Charlie"

  • @crististefan6065
    @crististefan6065 Рік тому +11

    Terry Melcher, if he recorded Charles Manson's music, Sharon Tate would still be alive today..

    • @chucklowery2314
      @chucklowery2314 Рік тому

      You're an idiot

    • @elsmeervd4893
      @elsmeervd4893 Рік тому +1

      Yep ! THATS the true ! No manson ,no KILLINGS!!!

    • @donnaturner9762
      @donnaturner9762 7 місяців тому +2

      I doubt that...a leopard does not change its spots. He had it inside of him. Might not have been poor Sharon but def somebody else would have been victimized by this psycho some other time for some other reason.

  • @sheilastutz6436
    @sheilastutz6436 Рік тому

    Well, yeah, music is powerful.

  • @boombacca8274
    @boombacca8274 Рік тому +1

    @14:34 a face of an Angel. those eyes and that smile symbolizes humanity as a whole.

  • @wandathompson5783
    @wandathompson5783 Рік тому +18

    He was the most scary man on earth I followed his story I grew up when all this happened scared alotta people then my prayers still go out to all the victims families

    • @brianwalsh1401
      @brianwalsh1401 Рік тому

      Sociopaths are all scary. They're master manipulators and every cult leader and totalitarian dictator is either a narcissist or sociopath. They can screw up one person in a relationship or at work or screw up a whole country, like Putin is doing now. Narcissist and sociopaths are 10% of the population. I was married to a covert narcissist and it took its toll on me.

    • @Dom_721
      @Dom_721 Рік тому +1

      Amazing use of run-on sentences. I also guarantee you dont know even half of what this guy was involved in

    • @petarticinovic2710
      @petarticinovic2710 Рік тому +2

      @@Dom_721 Amazing use of apostrophes and periods.🤣

    • @Trip4man
      @Trip4man Рік тому

      There are farrrrrr scarier men than him! Throughout history??! Omg. Even Jeffrey Dahmer can easily take that podium! I think Charles was a disturbed/broken man... That low quality of life, the drugs, the mindset,.... I've seen manyyyyy people get lost in life due to LSD for example. Their brains fry and basically they turn into monkeys. It was just bad decision after bad decision... I dabbled in that Hippie lifestyle and omg... If you take too much LSD... Your brain (and life) is going bye bye for sure. And if you add the parties, the raves,... That just piles up and boosts to the disaster that's going to happen. And yeah, when people reach that point... There isn't much they can do except crime, violence and all that stuff. Charles was deep deep in it. It actually seemed that Charles was trying to get out of that path... Doing music and all the things, he was moving! But he should've cut drastically that drug part. Sadly he didn't know better... As many other people to this day actually!

    • @CyberBullyBeatmaker
      @CyberBullyBeatmaker 6 місяців тому

      He was scary because he was a genius on the bad side of life.

  • @baneverything5580
    @baneverything5580 Рік тому +52

    I knew a guy like him. Dangerous but cool most of the time. Turned into a nightmare when he took even one sip of whiskey or did drugs.

    • @kevinnix5495
      @kevinnix5495 Рік тому +11

      That's literally most of us....

    • @bansheeofinisheerin
      @bansheeofinisheerin Рік тому +1

      @@kevinnix5495 BULLS***, KEVIN. Most of us aren’t raging f***ing lunatics, broseph.

    • @January.
      @January. Рік тому

      =Johnny Depp but the ignorant jury couldn't comprehend the reality of the scary effects of mixing drugs and alcohol.

    • @ameliabedelia7018
      @ameliabedelia7018 Рік тому

      @BAN EVERYTHING! How was his sexual prowess? Manson was said to lay that thang!

    • @conniewendel8882
      @conniewendel8882 Рік тому +11

      My brother was much like him. It became terrifying by the end of his life. I lived 48 years of hell with him. I hear some of the words and thoughts of Charlie, I hear my brother. Some people are just born different.They are highly intelligent, but use it for wrong. I watch these documentaries and compare the two. It's terrifying.