- 17 hours ago
- #familysecrets
- #drama
- #mystery
- #fullepisode
Dive into the compelling world of Unlocked - Family Secrets, a series where hidden truths and long-held mysteries come to light. In this episode, new revelations threaten to unravel the delicate balance of a family's past. Explore the intricate web of relationships and the profound impact of long-buried secrets.
unlocked-family-secrets family-secrets family-drama secrets mystery revelations hidden-truths full-episode
#FamilySecrets #Drama #Mystery #FullEpisode
unlocked-family-secrets family-secrets family-drama secrets mystery revelations hidden-truths full-episode
#FamilySecrets #Drama #Mystery #FullEpisode
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00I had an idyllic childhood, a loving family,
00:06and beautiful memories.
00:08But for most of my life, I've been focused
00:12on finding out where I came from.
00:14I had no idea my search would uncover a horrific family
00:19secret.
00:21I remember my mother said to me, just be careful
00:25and make sure that you're ready for what you might find.
00:30It felt like a world collapsing.
00:32That day would change my life forever.
00:36Your past sometimes will catch up with you.
00:39That storm is coming.
00:41It was just overwhelming.
00:43Then I just blacked out.
00:55I'm a firm believer in things happen when they're supposed
01:01to happen, how they're supposed to happen,
01:03whether you understand it or not.
01:07I definitely was raised by a mother who was strong and resilient.
01:11But we didn't really know that she was sick.
01:15Between March and May of 2017, it just went really fast.
01:21And then she passed away.
01:25With my grandmother passing, I know my mom felt a void,
01:31like something was missing at that time.
01:35There was a secret of her origin.
01:40For me, the goal became finding out where I came from.
01:45But I remember my mother said to me, be careful
01:50and make sure that you're ready for what you might find.
01:55All right, guys, let's hurry, hurry, hurry.
02:08Let's go.
02:09While we're standing there, we got a backpack.
02:10Let's get it in a locker.
02:12I am an assistant principal at a public high school
02:17in the south suburbs of Chicago.
02:19I started teaching 34 years ago.
02:23I was one of the first African-American teachers
02:27certified in the building.
02:29All right, here come my crew.
02:31Good morning.
02:32Can you hurry up?
02:33The bell already rang.
02:35As a teacher, I've always kind of gravitated toward what we call
02:39the at-risk students because I understand very clearly
02:43struggling with challenges.
02:48My trauma stems from the hidden history within my family,
02:53secrets from before I was ever born.
02:59I was born in August of 1966.
03:01I came home with my parents December 6th.
03:08There were pictures of me from my dads holding me
03:11at Christmas time.
03:15I was raised in a good home.
03:18I remember my grandfather had a farm.
03:20We had a pony that my grandfather had for us
03:24when we would come visit in the summer.
03:26And then I have this memory from around kindergarten,
03:33five years old.
03:34It was just, I don't know, like a little doctor's office.
03:38I was sitting someplace that I overheard a conversation
03:43where my mother said I was adopted.
03:49I knew what the word meant, but I didn't understand maybe fully
03:54how that, you know, was me.
03:59I remember asking my mom.
04:01So she explained it, yes, you're adopted.
04:09And so I remember going to school and telling kids,
04:13I'm adopted, I'm adopted.
04:16One of my school girls on the playground,
04:19she said to me, well, that means your brother is not really
04:23your brother.
04:25And it was hurtful.
04:28You always want to know.
04:30You're always curious about who your parents are,
04:32where you come from.
04:37Much of my life has been centered around one question.
04:41Who is my birth mother?
04:44I was in junior high, maybe 10, 11 years old.
04:47I would snoop.
04:48My mother would have drawers that she'd keep things in.
04:52I found my birth certificate.
04:55And at that time, you could not access your original birth
04:59certificate that was issued at birth.
05:02So the only name that's on that birth certificate
05:05would be your adoptive parent's name.
05:08Even the hospital was not there.
05:11So I thought maybe I could find out what
05:14hospital I was born in.
05:18I began dialing into hospitals and asking them if they could
05:23tell me how many baby girls were born on my birthday.
05:27And there were so many people born the same day as me.
05:32Like, I think I just realized how futile that was.
05:40I remember thinking, if my birth mother gave me up for adoption,
05:44then maybe there was a reason why.
05:47And maybe this isn't going to be this fairytale ending.
05:51And it was like, pump the brakes.
05:56Over the next 25 years, life happened.
05:59I got married, had my kids, Cameron and Colin.
06:03Still, I never gave up on my mission,
06:06to uncover the truth about my birth mother.
06:14Nobody's eating my vegetable, that my salad.
06:16This is a beautiful salad.
06:18Look at my salad.
06:18Today is our cheat day.
06:23I think it is interesting to reflect
06:27on where we started and then where we are now.
06:32My dad said, Jen, she's adopted too.
06:37And having this cousin who was also adopted,
06:41there was a sameness there.
06:43I appreciated that.
06:45And that set the seeds for what was to come.
06:48Like, you were a tutor, Jennifer.
06:50Like, you prepared me for the inevitable.
06:55And you set it off.
06:57Well, you know, I feel honored that you trusted me.
07:00So in 2011, adoptees in Illinois could request
07:04the original birth certificate.
07:06I got my original birth certificate in 2012.
07:09So I think I got mine January, February 2012.
07:13From there, it was just, we were in it.
07:17After 30 years, I finally got it.
07:24My original, unredacted birth certificate.
07:28It had where my birth mother was living at the time.
07:32And it had her name, like, oh, we have it.
07:37Oh, my God, like, that's her name, Deborah.
07:43And the name that I was born with was Kellyanne.
07:46My mother's age was there.
07:49She was young.
07:50She was 15.
07:52The father was not listed.
07:55Once I was able to see my birth mother's name,
07:59then it was like, OK, now I have some place to go with this.
08:03I remember being in the room, like, in her room.
08:09When she had opened it, there was excitement.
08:12And like, this is the first step to kind of getting,
08:14you know, some more information.
08:18So the very first thing was, if my birth mother was born in Harvey,
08:24what high school would she have gone to in 1966?
08:31There were two.
08:33One of the high schools at the time was predominantly white.
08:37So I'm like, nope, that's not going to be it.
08:39Then another high school, that's where I hit.
08:46I remember touching the yearbook and just thinking,
08:50this person is real.
08:54This name, now I can put a face to it.
09:03I got her transcript.
09:07That was the golden ticket.
09:09It had Debra's address at the time, her parents' names,
09:13what both parents did for a living.
09:17I was excited to have the information and excited to share it with my mother.
09:23But I held off picking up the phone and calling her because by now we found out that my mother had cancer.
09:31In May of 2017, my grandma passed away.
09:42We were all very sad, devastated.
09:47Devastated.
09:49Having lost my mother, now to go look for another mother, I felt guilty about that.
09:57And so I stopped.
10:06When you're grieving, you want to be surrounded by family.
10:09So when talking to my mom, I told her into the new year, we should probably start looking again for your birth mother.
10:23I found the service that would do background searches on people.
10:28So I put in my birth mother's name and it populates people who are associated with her.
10:37I would cross reference to Facebook.
10:45Ben Chambers.
10:47Was he my sibling?
10:49Was he the person who could connect me to my birth mother?
10:52I can see all of the people that Ben follows on social media.
11:04People that also came up in the background search.
11:08These could be my sibling.
11:13We figure out that Ben goes to a church that's really nearby.
11:18I made a decision to go to the church.
11:24When I drove into the parking lot, I was like, oh my God, what do I do?
11:27I'm not sure I want to do it.
11:33I was like, okay, this is really happening.
11:37Get it together.
11:39It was a big moment for Lisa.
11:42Now or never, really.
11:45What, was I coming back the next weekend?
11:46No, we're going to do this today.
11:58A woman walks up to me and she says, are you Reverend Ben?
12:03Can we talk for a minute?
12:06And I say, hey, we can talk right here.
12:10The woman says, do you have a place that's a little more private?
12:13This is like all the flags.
12:17But I feel like this nudge.
12:19And you should sit down and talk with this lady.
12:24That's when I started thinking to myself, well, what if this is not what you think it is?
12:32What if this might get real?
12:34Are you ready for that?
12:35So I sit down, the lady sits down and she moves her chair closer.
12:41So I'm like, oh crap, like what's about to happen?
12:45I was nervous.
12:46And so she starts talking and she says, I think that you and I are related.
12:59I've got cousins I've never met before.
13:01So that didn't alarm me.
13:03What alarmed me was what she said next.
13:05She says, I believe that we are brother and sister.
13:14The search took 37 years.
13:17And the fact that I was going to be introducing myself as a family member, I had to bring it.
13:24So I had the birth certificate, I had the yearbook photos, I had the transcripts.
13:32She's laying out all of this evidence.
13:35As we're talking and I'm giving him this information, I literally had it spread out on the table.
13:40And he was like, okay, okay, okay.
13:44In that moment, this woman started to look like my mom.
13:53I'm starting to recognize this woman's eyes and her cheekbones.
13:59And so I felt like this, this nudge is like, like, yes, she, she's telling the truth.
14:05So I don't know how long the pause was.
14:07It felt like a lifetime.
14:09And I'm sitting there like, okay, like what is happening?
14:14I wanted him to understand very clearly.
14:16I don't want anything from you.
14:18But I do want my birth mother to know that I'm fine.
14:24And then to me, it was just like this, this rush of emotion.
14:31Ben told me that in 2004, our birth mother had died of cancer.
14:39So I was never going to meet her.
14:41So we both were emotional.
14:48It was the rush of emotion of, at that time, not knowing the details about how Lisa came into existence.
14:58He says something like, well, let's exchange information.
15:02And I was like, okay.
15:03So I called my sister, Camille.
15:11I had no idea that the phone call that I received from Ben that day would change my life forever.
15:20And the tone in his voice kind of startled me.
15:23I said, do you think it's possible that mom would have gave birth to a daughter in the 60s?
15:34And Camille was basically like, yes.
15:37I always knew that there was something that happened to my mom.
15:47Growing up, I was always with my mother and my grandmother.
15:52They would be in the living room talking, and I would be upstairs.
15:59They would be talking in kind of cold.
16:03You know, they would say, well, you know, he, you know, did this, or he would say this.
16:09And they would always say he or him.
16:13I remember the frustration that I felt from my mother and kind of like a dismissiveness from my grandmother.
16:23And then as a child, I really didn't put it together.
16:26But it seemed like that day, everything just started coming back.
16:30Finding out what really happened to my mom, it scared me.
16:41This is a lot.
16:42Like, this is going to take a lot to unpack, a lot to figure out.
16:45So Camille, she starts immediately like Sherlock Holmes.
16:51I immediately called our uncle, my mother's brother.
16:57Said, does my, did my mother have a child?
17:00At 15, and I felt like he was pushing me off.
17:06You know, why are you asking me this?
17:09He kind of paused, and he said, you know, you should talk to your dad.
17:17I was on my way to church, and my son called me.
17:22And he said, do you know a lady named Laysa?
17:25I said, no, I do not.
17:26And he said, well, this lady cornered me in church.
17:30She might be my sister, and mom is her mother.
17:34The other day, a minister of the church, he was talking about your past will sometimes catch up with you.
17:49And then it dawned on me, it came back just like daylight.
17:54That storm is coming.
17:57It was an awakening of what is to come.
18:03So the search is complete.
18:11Who has my birth story?
18:14That's what I was looking forward to at that point.
18:16You know, the things that my siblings could tell me about my birth mother.
18:23Ben said he was going to call me.
18:25So I think it was just this nervous anticipation, hoping that I would get the call.
18:32She felt a good vibe at first, but then it was kind of like, okay, now what?
18:37Now what's next?
18:38So then day number two, now I'm beginning to feel like, hmm, we might have a problem here.
18:47She's telling me I haven't heard anything from them.
18:49I'm like, oh, they hate me.
18:51There is rejection.
18:52They're rejecting me.
18:57You know how your mind is going a thousand miles.
19:03Why all of a sudden did this woman show up?
19:06She finally found this.
19:09My dad is basically like, yes, this is true.
19:13Your mom did have a daughter, gave the child up for adoption.
19:17Yes.
19:18It made me angry.
19:19It made me feel like, you know, why didn't anyone tell me?
19:25I had to come to grips with the fact that mom took this family secret to the grave.
19:35So that week, talking to my dad, talking to my siblings,
19:41at the time I was still the only point of contact for Lisa.
19:46So my call to Lisa was to say, hey, let's get together.
19:50And it just kind of snowballed from there.
19:54Every piece of information I learned about my birth mother, Deborah, was priceless.
19:59It was crazy to learn that she had grown up in Markham, Illinois, not far from where I had settled down and raised my own family.
20:09So from what I understand of the family history, Deborah's mother met her stepfather and they got married when Deborah was about three years old.
20:21Then Deborah's stepfather and her mother went on to have two more children.
20:26So Deborah and I, we were high school sweethearts.
20:33We attended Thornton Township High School, which is located in Harvey, Illinois.
20:38She was a great person to me.
20:41Very exciting to be around and cheer for most of the time.
20:45A friend of mine introduced us.
20:48And I know that my mom initially was not that interested in him.
20:55But my dad writes a letter to my mom's mom, like, hey, please tell Deborah to reconsider.
21:01Like, I'm a really nice guy, like all these things.
21:04And obviously it worked.
21:06The summer of 1966, I went by there to her house one day and her mother told me she was visiting her grandmother.
21:20I thought maybe she'd be gone about a couple of weeks.
21:23It was really the entire summer that she was gone.
21:30She didn't come back until school started again.
21:32And she wasn't the same.
21:41She wanted me to accompany her to Christ Temple Church.
21:48She wanted to go and talk to the minister there.
21:51So I stood outside until she finished.
21:54And then walking home, and she didn't talk about anything.
22:09After that, we both attended Thornton Community College.
22:14We were still dating, having fun.
22:17One day, I had went on and proposed to her.
22:21I said, what do you think about getting married?
22:24And she said, let me think about it.
22:31Some months passed.
22:34And Deborah asked me, have you ever wondered, really, was I at my grandmother's house
22:40during the summer that she wasn't there?
22:42I said, no, I just believed that you was at your grandmother's house.
22:50She said, after I tell you something, you may not want to marry me.
22:55She was very blunt.
22:56I am not a virgin.
23:00And she didn't get into who the person was.
23:04She just said that she had a child.
23:09But I had to give her up for adoption.
23:14I got quiet for a few minutes.
23:18And then I said, so?
23:23I said, I'm marrying you as you are.
23:30A lot went on in that house.
23:34I was born to keep my mouth shut.
23:40But after Lisa found this, the kids kept asking me and stuff.
23:45So finally, I told them exactly what happened to her.
23:52So my dad kind of filled in the blanks of what we were missing.
23:57Enough for the full weight of the story to kind of come down like,
24:04okay, this is pretty nasty.
24:06Like, this is pretty ugly.
24:07There is this euphoria when you are looking for something and you find it.
24:22But when you get an answer, you have more questions.
24:25You have more questions.
24:26Now the time had come to meet the rest of the Chambers family, my family,
24:32and find out why I had been given up for adoption.
24:36I arrived to the church.
24:37Camille and Ben were already there.
24:41And as soon as she walked through the door,
24:43I was like, oh, my God.
24:46Like, that is my mother walking through the door.
24:49Just like with Ben, I brought all of the artifacts that I had.
24:56When I saw that birth certificate and I said, this is for real,
25:00it was a goosebump moment seeing that.
25:03I was super nervous.
25:05My face was hot.
25:06I felt like I was shaking.
25:07There was just this anxiety in the air immediately.
25:14And then transitioning to questions about what they knew and what they didn't know.
25:22I asked, well, do you know who my father is?
25:28I remember Camille did a lot of the talking.
25:31She's in this place where it's raw.
25:33You can't, like, just throw the truth on other people.
25:39But this secret needs to come out.
25:43And so I'm listening to Camille say, our mother's stepfather is your father.
25:56And she said, you know, the sexual assault,
26:00it happened as early as, you know, like seven or eight years old.
26:03And it was, you know, over the course of several years.
26:13Your biological father raped your biological mom.
26:16And this is how you were brought into this world.
26:18It was just like, it was, it was information overload.
26:30It was just so overwhelming.
26:34Then I just, I blacked out.
26:36It was just too much.
26:38I remember saying that I want to stop.
26:40I need to take a break.
26:44And then I started weeping.
26:48The weight of the circumstances surrounding Lisa's birth, it felt like a world collapsing.
26:54I felt pain projecting what she must have gone through.
27:02You know, thinking about the sexual abuse, thinking about carrying a child that you, you know,
27:09maybe you didn't wish.
27:10At 15, you don't have a choice.
27:11She wasn't given a choice.
27:12I called our uncle because he was in the house.
27:19He's her sibling.
27:20He would know directly.
27:22I felt like he was squirming as I, as he was talking to me.
27:26Like, why are you asking me this?
27:31He, he just kept rejecting it.
27:36You know, and to have him just loft it off.
27:41And it's like, you're protecting your father, who's not only a pedophile, a rapist,
27:48but you're protecting this.
27:49And I, and I couldn't understand that.
27:51At one point, he did tell me my mother was not the first woman that his father stepped out on his
28:03mother with.
28:05I was just like, woman, you know, mom was a child.
28:10This was not like, you know, she was dating an older guy and she got pregnant as a teenager.
28:17This was her stepfather that had children with her mother.
28:26You know, we're talking about a, you know, a 50 plus year old secret.
28:32The reality is there, there are people who were very content with taking this to their grave.
28:39And that does not help the victim at all.
28:45It gives power to the victimizer.
28:48I just remember like, just really sitting at home and having a difficult time.
28:54Just realizing the age my, my daughters were at at that time,
28:58that my mother at that age was being sexually abused, raped by, by an adult.
29:04I absolutely felt betrayed by my uncle.
29:11I would travel out to visit my uncle, stay in the house, and we would go to church,
29:17and we reminisce about mom and about granny, and this never came up.
29:23You know, and then when it does, he's being this, you know, protector of his father.
29:28And it was just like, who are you and what is really going on?
29:34I woke up that Sunday, and now I know that I am a product of this sexual assault.
29:49And with that truth came this enormous pain to my siblings who didn't even know I existed.
29:56The reality of it hit me in such a way that I remember feeling like maybe I should not have tried to find them.
30:08Because now they are carrying the weight of this truth about a sexual assault that happened to our mother.
30:15And I remember, I was weeping about that.
30:20It was like, so what do I symbolize?
30:23Am I the sister or am I now, you are this horrific thing that happened to our mother?
30:29It was a very, very heavy and dark couple weeks to navigate and kind of deal with.
30:42You start to think about how, like how could this happen?
30:46How could this persist?
30:47After all this time, I'd been given this gift of discovering my birth mother,
30:55only to learn about the trauma she went through to bring me into this world.
31:01To be this 15-year-old, you're pregnant with your stepfather's child, how is this possible?
31:09When we were dating, I remember Debra didn't want to go home at certain times and she didn't want to be there.
31:18So, you know, we would go out driving until almost the time when her mother would get home.
31:25Because her mother, Mildred, worked nights.
31:29This when all this took place, because she wasn't there.
31:32She was working nights and he had just total control over her.
31:42She was at age 15 years old or so.
31:46What could she do?
31:52When Debra told me that she had a child, one thing just led up to that it was her stepfather.
32:02And then it dined on me, okay.
32:06That's why he had a smirk on his face.
32:08Every time I was over there, you know, like it was a laughter smirk.
32:19She went to her mother, but she said, I don't think my mother believed me at first.
32:26It was her word against his word.
32:29He, you know, he denied it.
32:32And then there's the pastor.
32:38Debra stopped going to the pastor for counseling because he said she must be enjoying doing it.
32:45Being with her stepfather.
32:48She must because she came to him and not the police.
32:52In my mom's situation, I feel like there are multiple settings in which she was failed.
33:02From the home front to the church setting, the two places where my mom should have got hope, help.
33:14She got none of that.
33:15I can't imagine my mom being 15, navigating this.
33:21So at some point, I did speak to Debra's half-brother, who would be my uncle.
33:34He asked me, was I interested in meeting my birth father?
33:45And I said, no.
33:47When you kind of realize who your father is, how that came about, it was definitely a hard pill for all of us to swallow.
33:58And being a woman, you know, you kind of are heartbroken about just what Debra had to go through.
34:06It was even harder to deal with the fact that while my birth mother had suffered so much,
34:14my birth father, her abuser, was still alive.
34:18She died without ever seeing him brought to justice.
34:22We wanted to fight back for our mother because, you know, we're doing what she couldn't do.
34:28There's no statute of limitations.
34:30Why aren't we trying to press charges, get this guy arrested?
34:36Ben and I went on this journey.
34:45We went downtown and we searched records for if there was any court case, anything in the files.
34:55The only thing that we could find was our grandmother's divorce proceedings.
34:59It looked like it was brought up that the 15-year-old stepdaughter was pregnant.
35:06And, you know, can we press charges? What can we do about this?
35:10And the court actually said, no, nothing.
35:16Because he was a family member, charges couldn't be pressed during the divorce proceedings.
35:23If we couldn't do it in court, I suggested that we make signs and go down to his house
35:31and get a bullhorn and say, a pedophile lives here, a rapist lives here.
35:36I don't care how old he is. He's a pedophile. You were a pedophile then. You still are a pedophile. You are a rapist.
35:44And I just, you know, just had these thoughts of, you know, him looking and saying, who is this?
35:51And, you know, us being here and saying, we're Deborah's children.
35:55But I couldn't get anybody to do that with me.
35:59I came to this conclusion that, like, we're fighting for her and maybe that's not really what she wanted.
36:11Maybe what she wanted was us embracing Lisa and bringing Lisa in.
36:17I feel like that would have been something that mom would have done.
36:21It's painful to know that my birth mother, Deborah, died without ever seeing her children in reunion.
36:32But we are all committed to keeping our new family bond strong in her honor.
36:38You're meant to be.
36:41Sometimes I call her daughter. I say, I'm going to start calling you daughter.
36:46And Deborah, she wanted to adopt her when she found her.
36:51Bring her into the family. So, I was committed to that.
37:01That picture of all of us.
37:02Oh, yeah.
37:04No, it's not in there.
37:04This is pre-Civil Rights era.
37:06All five of us.
37:08Yeah.
37:08You know what they say, things that are done in the dark always come to life.
37:12The truth always surfaces.
37:14Yeah.
37:14I'm glad we can look at pictures and resemblances because, you know,
37:20Sunday after I talked to you guys, like, I felt guilty about, you know,
37:31bringing you this information that I was a sister that you didn't know about.
37:35Did you all ever have any regrets about, you know, the secret, so to speak, coming out?
37:43I'm glad that it was out.
37:46The secret was out.
37:47Yeah.
37:48You know.
37:48You are glad it's out.
37:50Yes.
37:50Because I, you know, after she had passed away, I was wondering, will we ever really meet you?
37:57Mm-hmm.
37:59And I'm glad that we was able to meet you.
38:04Mm-hmm.
38:05We talked about that a lot, like, as we were navigating the space.
38:08Being able to verbalize that the, it's not, the issue is not with you.
38:13Mm-hmm.
38:14The issue is with everything else surrounding.
38:16Good situation.
38:17Yeah.
38:18The beauty that came out of meeting you, who you are, and who Cameron is, and Colin is,
38:25I just think that that was able to cover a lot of what mom went through.
38:29But it's like, oh my gosh, we have another sister and two more and other knees and another nephew.
38:34Like, this is awesome.
38:36I'm glad that I had a desire to find my family.
38:40I'm glad that someone desired to find me.
38:44You know, it could have gone a lot of different ways.
38:46Easter 2018 was tough because it was a year to the date almost of when my mother was diagnosed
39:01with cancer.
39:02I remember sitting on the couch at Ben's house thinking that I'd lost everything.
39:08But if we think about what Easter represents with, you know, rebirth and renewal,
39:14I think it was a good first holiday or celebration or family gathering to have
39:22because it symbolized a new family.
39:28The connection that I wanted, that I hoped for, had Deborah still been alive,
39:33I don't, I don't think I'll ever be able to capture that because she's just not here.
39:38But as I find out things about my birth mother, things like she was also in education,
39:49things like Camille has said our hands look alike, and my kids even saw a picture where they said,
39:55they gave them chills, we look so much alike. I think maybe that is a level of connectedness.
40:02If my birth mother was here, the message that I gave to Ben when we met that Sunday would pretty
40:12much be the same. We're supposed to do that other one. You know, I would just basically want her to
40:18know that I've had a good life, I've had a happy life, that, you know, I feel like the strength
40:26that I have is in my DNA. I definitely was raised by a mother who was strong and resilient,
40:34but then to find out that I was birthed by a mother who also had this resiliency and just incredible
40:42strength. I just take heart, you know, that I can be a part of that legacy and keep it going.
40:48Why does he not want me to be around his family? That's what started making me feel like,
41:00is he hiding something from me? He just said to us, thank you who he is,
41:05but you don't know who he really is. This was big front page news for weeks. Man,
41:13he was able to do that and nobody knew for so long. I was taking this secret to my grave.
41:20I'm like, oh my god. This is not real.
Recommended
42:29
|
Up next
1:57:43
41:24
41:31
41:32
6:51:57
47:18
50:55
43:34
43:17
43:31
43:53
51:44
50:09
41:31
41:31
43:12
49:57
50:13
Be the first to comment