Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 4 hours ago
Get ready to unravel the truth behind the internet's most alarming headlines! We're diving deep into the recently released Epstein files, dissecting the viral phrases and terms that sparked widespread speculation and conspiracy theories. From alleged coded language to unverified claims, we're separating fact from fiction and exploring what these cryptic mentions truly mean – or don't mean – in the official record. Prepare for a mind-bending look at the evidence and the sensationalism that followed.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00I wanted to let you know, the crew really appreciated the pizza today.
00:04This is from a guy named Roy Hodges to Jeffrey Epstein.
00:07Welcome to WatchMojo.
00:08And today we're breaking down some of the most exclusively viral terms
00:12that have appeared in the latest Epstein Files drop,
00:14and what they do and don't mean.
00:16We want to be deceived.
00:18We don't want to believe the horrors that are actually behind the veil.
00:25Party with a dozen one-year-olds.
00:27Outrage growing as new details emerge from the millions of newly released
00:32Justice Department records on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
00:36Few phrases from the Epstein Files release sounded stranger or spread faster
00:40than the claim that the documents described, quote,
00:42a party with a dozen one-year-olds.
00:44On social media, cropped screenshots made it appear as though investigators
00:48had uncovered documentation of an infant gathering tied directly to Epstein.
00:53The reality was bizarre, but in a different way.
00:55The wording came from a 2014 email sent to Epstein by literary agent John Brockman.
01:01In the message, he described organizing a dinner party with, quote,
01:04a dozen beautiful girls, and in a separate thought,
01:07mentioned having recently attended a birthday celebration for one-year-olds.
01:11Online posts blended those unrelated lines together,
01:14transforming two separate references into one alarming scenario.
01:18What are you, class three sexual predator?
01:21Tier one.
01:21Was tier one the highest and worst?
01:23No, I'm the lowest.
01:25You're the lowest.
01:26Okay, tier one, you're the lowest.
01:28But a criminal.
01:29Yes.
01:30Snopes reviewed the full context and concluded that the viral claim misrepresented the email.
01:35There was no documented event involving toddlers at Epstein's home.
01:39Still, the odd juxtaposition of glamorous social language and a reference to infants
01:44was enough to ignite imaginations.
01:46The devil himself said, I'm going to exchange some dollars for your child's life.
01:51Do you think you're the devil himself?
01:54No, but I do have a good mirror.
01:57It's a serious question.
01:58Oh, sorry.
01:59Do you think you're the devil himself?
02:01I don't know.
02:02Why would you say that?
02:03Cream cheese.
02:04Now, another code word that's come up that people think is very creepy is cream cheese.
02:09This one is dark.
02:11All right, this is an r slash conspiracy.
02:12We're going to join.
02:13Um, said, lol, I don't know if cream cheese and baby are on the same level.
02:17It's okay.
02:18There's still enough time today.
02:19I'm trying to schedule priming for 530 fuel explosion for 945 p.m.
02:24We'll bring a new engine startup video.
02:26The phrase cream cheese began circulating after users highlighted an email included in released
02:32Epstein related materials that mentioned, quote, cream cheese, alongside references
02:36to, quote, babies.
02:38In particular, an Epstein email stating that, quote, there are millions of babies, very little
02:44good vegetable cream cheese, raised eyebrows en masse.
02:47The viral interpretation suggested the pairing of those words could not be innocent.
02:51Milk needs baby juices mixed in to ferment the cheese, not like those expensive copy beans
02:55that are pooped out by squirrels or some animal.
02:57If you're interested, dig into the history of how cannibalism went from sustenance to primitive
03:01religion.
03:02Then to organize religion, it's symbolic for the regular people.
03:04Now the Holy Communion is totally unrelated.
03:06However, the email in question didn't contain explicit references to abuse, trafficking or
03:12ritual activity, nor did prosecutors ever identify, quote, cream cheese as operational
03:17terminology in Epstein's case.
03:19What fueled the speculation was ambiguity.
03:21Private correspondence using casual or unclear language stripped of full conversational context
03:27without supporting testimony or hard evidence showing there was intent behind it.
03:31Turning unusual wording into proof of a secret code just doesn't hold up.
03:35I'm going to be that guy.
03:36Or does anyone else feel like this food code stuff is well poisoning?
03:40You didn't post the rest of the email where he mentions a specific deli to get veggie cream
03:44cheese.
03:44A morbid joke, sure, but I feel like they're trying to send us down the wrong rabbit holes.
03:48People saying I agree with you.
03:49It's either well poisoning or delusional confirmation bias.
03:51This is clearly a discussion about being able to source a vegetarian cream cheese.
03:55But the people who are starved for actual evidence are jumping to every conclusion they can.
03:59Pizza isn't even the most frequently mentioned food in the Epstein files, but more on that
04:04a bit later.
04:05Sushi appears more than 1,200 times.
04:07Pasta shows up over 400 times.
04:10Ice cream is referenced nearly 600 times.
04:13Those numbers have fueled speculation that food language must carry hidden meaning.
04:17But frequency alone does not establish a code.
04:20It establishes repetition.
04:22Another email read,
04:24This one talks about, yeah, that's the pizza.
04:30You mean radiating a soft glow with a look of bliss and excitement.
04:34There's one more, I think, in this list as well.
04:37Sorry, I have no stomach for even the slightest aggro.
04:39I don't have the stomach for it for any drama, imaginary or real.
04:42I'm still fragile off the last one and scared of shadows.
04:45An Epstein employee in Florida told the FBI that Epstein liked getting ice cream from a
04:49local shop with the girls.
04:50In a 2014 email, LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman told Epstein he had sent ice cream to his
04:55Manhattan home, suggesting it could be shared, quote, for the girls.
04:59That same year, Epstein requested sushi and Oreo ice cream for a meeting with banker Ariane
05:04de Rothschild and Kissinger Associates executive Joshua Cooper-Remo.
05:08Quote, Oreo ice cream appears dozens of times in the files.
05:12Some blank redacted writes to Epstein,
05:15Ice cream Oreo for blank for Paris?
05:18Should we send it with you to Palm Beach?
05:22So this blank is sending Oreo ice cream all the way to Palm Beach to Epstein so it could
05:31be sent for someone to Paris.
05:36Jerky.
05:37There's another one here.
05:38Have you seen the beef jerky mentions as well?
05:40There's an email here from Jeffrey Epstein.
05:42Someone else says, Francis, Francis has time to come tomorrow to show me how to make it.
05:46Jerky anyone?
05:47He will also bring you a taste of his jerky recipe from the restaurant and sends a warm
05:54hello.
05:54He's working at a restaurant called Cook's.
05:56Wait for it.
05:57Beef jerky and steak.
05:58Jerky became one of the more unexpected viral talking points after users noticed it appeared
06:03hundreds of times in released Epstein-related files, roughly 380 mentions in total.
06:08One frequently cited example is a 2013 email from LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman to Epstein,
06:14in which Hoffman wrote that, quote, beef jerky was one of, quote, many threads for our next
06:19call, alongside topics like, quote, planes, quote, charity, and, quote, mapping orthogonal
06:25dimensions.
06:25Another one here is sending Jeffrey Epstein, sending it to Steve Hansen, saying, hope you're
06:29feeling better.
06:30Did we analyze the beef?
06:32Did we analyze the jerky?
06:34Now, there's talks about jerky, you know, referencing human meat.
06:39It could be for scientific research.
06:40It could be something else that's even sicker.
06:43Online theorists seized on the repetition of the word, with some suggesting it was coded
06:47language for cannibalism.
06:49However, the files also contain extensive jerky-related correspondence from chef Francis Derby,
06:54identified in the documents as Epstein's private cook.
06:58Time now for the fresh grocer, Tony Tantillo, and today it's Tony's table.
07:01He's taking us to Cannibal Restaurant in Culver City.
07:05Francis Derby is the executive chef, and he's showing us how to make his special pork tostada.
07:10Derby suggested preparing, storing, and transporting large quantities of jerky to Little St. James,
07:16suggesting the volume of references reflects a dietary preference rather than encrypted messaging.
07:21Trump's calendar girls' parties.
07:23In a 2017 email to former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, Epstein writing,
07:29I have met some very bad people, none as bad as Trump.
07:33Not one decent cell in his body.
07:35So yes, dangerous.
07:37In a 2018 text to an unidentified person, Epstein writes,
07:41I am the one who can take him down.
07:43Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein moved in overlapping social circles during the 1990s and early 2000s,
07:49particularly in Palm Beach and New York.
07:51President Trump publicly acknowledged knowing Epstein and was quoted in a 2002 New York magazine profile discussing him socially.
07:58In recent file releases, a document briefly posted and then removed by the Department of Justice
08:04referenced unverified allegations involving, quote, calendar girl parties at Mar-a-Lago.
08:09And instead of inviting hordes of people, instead of having a big long list of VIPs,
08:15Trump only invited one other human being to attend this party with him.
08:19So it's Trump, the women, and one other person.
08:24And that one other person was none other than Jeffrey Epstein himself.
08:29Reporting noted that the specific claim lacked supporting evidence and wasn't part of any criminal charge against Epstein.
08:36That didn't stop viral conspiracy theories from spreading like wildfire,
08:40largely owing to the DOJ's decision to take the document down without explanation.
08:44We knew that Donald Trump and Epstein were friends, right?
08:48We had that interview from New York magazine back in 2002 where Trump famously said, quote,
08:55I've known Jeff for 15 years.
08:56Terrific guy.
08:57He's a lot of fun to be with.
08:59It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do.
09:02And many of them are on the younger side.
09:04No doubt about it.
09:05Jeffrey enjoys his social life, right?
09:08Cannibalism and ritual sacrifice.
09:09The first shocking piece of evidence is the name of Epstein's bank account,
09:13which goes by the name Ball, the demon that the Bible mentions that demanded human sacrifice.
09:18The document states, please wire $11,438 from the above account to Ball.
09:23Name, Wachovia Bank, NA.
09:25A very weird title to call your bank account,
09:27but given the fact that these are child monsters and children were sacrificed to this demon, it makes sense.
09:32When millions of pages tied to Jeffrey Epstein's investigations were released,
09:36one of the most explosive claims to spread online was that the files proved cannibalism and ritual sacrifice.
09:42Viral posts highlighted that the words, quote,
09:45cannibal and, quote, cannibalism appeared in the documents,
09:48presenting that fact as confirmation of something far darker than the already documented crimes.
09:53While those words do appear in the massive release,
09:56they surface in the context of interviews and unverified allegations,
10:00not confirmed investigative conclusions.
10:02In particular, some of the claims stemmed from an anonymous account given to authorities that described extreme abuse,
10:09which included ritualistic elements.
10:11Stephen Colbert did a little skit on his show where,
10:13oh, here's a baby, I'm going to take this baby and I'm going to give it to Moloch.
10:17And he goes into like a cloudy red, you know, furnace and hands the baby over.
10:23And he's, oh, the baby's going to be fine.
10:24And they make a joke about it and the audience laughs.
10:26Okay, we're all now conditioned to it.
10:28However, these statements were not corroborated with evidence,
10:32nor were they reflected in federal indictments.
10:34The presence of disturbing language in a sprawling investigative archive
10:38does not on its own establish proof of cannibalism or ritual murder.
10:42No, there's clearly a code.
10:44Well, that was the thing about Pizzagate.
10:45No, it's absolutely a code.
10:46And in fact, mundus volt decepi, ergo decepiatur.
10:49It's a long known concept.
10:51And so in Latin, mundus volt decepi means the world wants to be deceived.
10:58Ergo decepi a tour.
10:59Therefore, it is.
11:01Before we continue, be sure to subscribe to our channel and ring the bell to get notified about our latest
11:06videos.
11:06You have the option to be notified for occasional videos or all of them.
11:10If you're on your phone, make sure you go into your settings and switch on notifications.
11:16Pizza.
11:17I wanted to let you know the crew really appreciated the pizza today.
11:22Thank you for letting us do that.
11:26Oh, Roy and Stephanie.
11:28That's nice.
11:28Thanks for letting us do that.
11:30You mean eat pizza?
11:32Of course, that's not what that means.
11:34Pizza is obviously a code word for something.
11:38After the Department of Justice began releasing massive amounts of documents tied to Jeffrey Epstein's investigations, some social media users
11:45claimed the materials vindicated the long-debunked Pizzagate conspiracy.
11:49Now with the latest drop of Epstein files, the topics around pizza in these Epstein emails have come up numerous
11:58times, hundreds of times, in fact.
12:01Their reasoning centered on one detail, the repeated appearance of the word pizza.
12:06To critics, the frequency itself felt suspicious.
12:09Why would that word show up so often in files connected to a convicted sex offender?
12:13And I think that's what we're really learning through the Epstein files is that it's not just that Pizzagate is
12:19more than we had thought it was, but we're getting more insight into the communication and the way that these
12:26people interact with each other.
12:28In sprawling document releases that include emails, interviews, travel records, and casual correspondence, common words are bound to appear multiple
12:36times.
12:37What matters is context, and in the instances highlighted, quote, pizza referred to actual food, not encrypted communication.
12:44How many times was pizza mentioned in the latest batch of Epstein files?
12:49911 times.
12:51Adults talking about pizza.
12:55No indictment, court filing, or official investigative finding identifies pizza as trafficking code.
13:01The pattern may look strange at first glance, but the documents themselves do not support the leap from repetition to
13:08conspiracy.
13:09So they always, this is what, so if you noticed that they were talking about pizza as a code word
13:14for something, or grape soda, they made it out to be crazy.
13:18Which keyword shocked you the most?
13:20Are there any we missed?
13:21Be sure to let us know in the comments.
13:25Be sure to let us know in the comments.
13:25Be sure to let us know in the comments.
13:25Be sure to let us know in the comments.
13:26Be sure to let us know in the comments.
13:26Be sure to let us know in the comments.
Comments

Recommended