Sammy Davis Jr. received his Warlock Ordainment Certificate and official Baphomet medallion backstage before a concert in front of almost 4,000 people at the Circle Star Theater on Friday the 13th.
Episode 669: Anton LaVey Part IV - Old Wizards Die Hard
Sammy Davis Jr. was secretly the Church of Satan's most devoted warlock — and his tame nights were with Anton LaVey, not the cocaine crowd.
Last Podcast On The Left
Episode 669: Anton LaVey Part IV - Old Wizards Die Hard
Sammy Davis Jr. was secretly the Church of Satan's most devoted warlock — and his tame nights were with Anton LaVey, not the cocaine crowd.
TL;DR
Last Podcast on the Left closes out their Anton LaVey series with three wild final acts: Sammy Davis Jr.'s unlikely run as the Church of Satan's most glamorous warlock, Michael Aquino's nerdy Protestant-style revolt that birthed the Temple of Set, and the Satanic Panic's slow-motion destruction of LaVey's legacy. LaVey's fatal flaw — emotional crystallization, nostalgia weaponized against growth — is the episode's real thesis [1] — Marcus Parks "In 1963, neo-Nazi James Madol's National Renaissance Party counter-protested CORE civil rights demonstrators outside White Castle restauran…" 1:19:00 . The takeaway: old wizards die hard because they refuse to change while they're still alive [2] — Marcus Parks "He could have come right out after Michelle Remembers was released and said no. He could have opened up the Church of Satan to the world. H…" 1:33:20 .
The final chapter of Last Podcast on the Left's Anton LaVey series, covering Sammy Davis Jr.'s role as the Church of Satan's most devoted celebrity warlock, Michael Aquino's nerdy schism and founding of the Temple of Set, and the Satanic Panic's destruction of LaVey's legacy.
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Before a single word of Satanic history is spoken, the episode opens with a promo for Evil Dead: Burn and rolls through ads for SNHU, Squarespace, BetterHelp, and Mint Mobile. Marcus Parks, Henry Zebrowski, and Ed Larson introduce themselves with characteristic chaos — Ed's George Clinton shirt stakes a claim to the only cool person in the room, Marcus's Neil Adams Batman tee ranks second, and Henry obliterates both with his 700-page two-volume set of Michael Aquino's Church of Satan history. The hosts warn listeners that the episode will get deeply nerdy, and Henry teases the finale: a Gandalf-based allegory explaining why Anton LaVey, like all old wizards, refused to die the death his growth required.
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Picking up from the previous episode, Marcus Parks traces the arc from NBC's TV movie 'Poor Devil' — in which Sammy Davis Jr. played a low-level demon — to Davis's formal induction as the Church of Satan's honorary warlock. Michael Aquino had called the show 'a magnificent commercial for the church,' and Marcus agrees it was genuinely Satanic in its message: focused, justified revenge that hurts only the deserving. Anton LaVey's antenna went up, but he kept his distance out of a pee-shyness about Hollywood. [1] — Marcus Parks "Sammy Davis Jr. didn't just flirt with Satanism — he went all in. Within a month of receiving the Church of Satan's letter, he accepted his…" 04:02 Davis, however, accepted the warlock offer within a month, and on the night of his concert — Friday the 13th, at the Circle Star Theater, a name that encodes a pentagram — he received his Baphomet medallion backstage before nearly 4,000 fans. He went out wearing it on his chest and closed with Sammy's near-Satanic anthem, 'I Gotta Be Me.' Nothing in the world could have made Sammy happier.
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Henry drops a bombshell from Michael Aquino's Church of Satan history: the published Satanic Bible heavily sanitized the actual ritual, which included a female altar masturbating a consecrated host to completion inside her, the host then dissolved in urine and drunk communally, and LaVey concluding with a solo finish. The hosts riff on the absurdity before Marcus brings it back to the larger point — these rituals were controlled ceremonial theater, and after the mass everyone had coffee and cake. This context makes the Sammy Davis Jr. friendship funnier: Davis was a whiskey-and-cocaine man who had specifically invited two young witches to his first gathering with Anton and Diane, hoping for an orgy with the head freaks. Instead, he got sober intellectual conversation about Satanist theology and a German silent film. Davis's silver cocaine bowl got pushed behind the bar. His nights with the Satanists were, in the end, his most wholesome.
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As Anton LaVey finally began to feel like he belonged at Davis's Hollywood parties, his insecurities sabotaged him. When Davis invited both LaVey and his Poor Devil co-star Christopher Lee to a dinner party, LaVey bristled — Lee was another spooky figure, and LaVey wanted to be Sammy's only one. What LaVey didn't know is that Lee was a committed Christian occultist who believed Satanism was folly. When LaVey baited Lee by insisting Bela Lugosi was a superior Dracula to Lee's ten portrayals, Davis had to physically step between them before a fight broke out — a comic image given that the 5'4" Davis was mediating between two men well over 6 feet. [1] — Marcus Parks "Sammy Davis Jr. diagnosed with terminal throat cancer, 1989: When Sammy Davis Jr.'s 1989 tribute show aired after his terminal cancer diagn…" 36:26 More damage came from Frank Sinatra, who told Davis to cool it with the Satanists in the late '70s, apparently unaware these were Sammy's most pharmaceutical-free evenings. The friendship faded, and when Davis was diagnosed with terminal cancer and his 1989 tribute was televised, LaVey watched from home. He hadn't spoken to Sammy in a decade, and the chance to break into Hollywood through the greatest entertainer alive had evaporated permanently.
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Henry Zebrowski delivers three sponsor reads in his signature unhinged style: Boll & Branch sheets (he felt like 'the luckiest pasta filling in the world' sliding in), Acorns investing app (framed via squirrel metaphor), and IXL educational platform (involving his dog Carmi's chocolate emergencies and his daughter Wendy's objections to American history as taught). Standard ad break, nothing more.
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The episode now turns to the inner mechanics of the Church of Satan's most significant schism. The core problem: LaVey was an atheist who used Satan as theatrical branding, while Aquino genuinely believed Satan was a real, contactable deity. Henry notes that Aquino was — accidentally — just reinventing Christianity with worse aesthetics. The breaking point came when money ran short in 1975 and LaVey decided to simply sell initiatory ranks, a move Aquino compared to the Catholic Church selling indulgences. [1] — Marcus Parks "Aquino left Church of Satan in 1975 to found Temple of Set: Michael Aquino left the Church of Satan in 1975 after LaVey began selling churc…" 45:15 Aquino played Martin Luther, published his objections, and left, taking a fair number of other disillusioned Satanists with him. His new organization, the Temple of Set, cast the biblical Satan as the ancient Egyptian deity Set, god of storms and desert, the murderer of Osiris. Henry points out that Aquino also penned his foundational text — received, he claimed, through automatic writing like Aleister Crowley's Book of the Law — and named it The Book of Coming Forth by Night, apparently unaware of the avalanche of ejaculate jokes that would follow.
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After founding the Temple of Set, Michael Aquino settled into the role of an academic, earning a PhD in political science and taking an adjunct professor post at Golden Gate University, while continuing to publish a scathing history of the Church of Satan that debunked LaVey's many self-invented myths. But his more disturbing parallel obsession was with Nazi occultism. In 1983, on a UN work trip to Europe, Aquino detoured to Wewelsburg Castle — Heinrich Himmler's intended ceremonial HQ for his Aryan knighthood — and performed a ritual in the underground chamber Himmler had designed for his own rites. [1] — Marcus Parks "Aquino performed Nazi ritual at Wewelsburg Castle in 1983: Michael Aquino used UN contacts to sneak into Wewelsburg Castle in 1983 and perf…" 57:12 Out of this came the Second Order of the Trapezoid, which Aquino decreed was a chivalric order of occult knights. He denied sympathy for Nazi ideology while simultaneously arguing that Himmler had genuinely summoned an extraordinary psychic force that had merely been 'misdirected.' Henry unpacks the incoherence: you cannot separate a magical tradition from the Holocaust that powered it, full stop. It was not a whoopsie.
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The Satanic Panic was a machinery of false accusation built from leading questions posed to small children who wanted to please adults and be rewarded. Investigators treated every wild claim as evidence, and a nationwide Satanic underground that never existed was constructed entirely from the statements of 3-year-olds. Michael Aquino became one of its most prominent victims when 58 children were allegedly abused at the Presidio Army Base daycare in San Francisco, and a 3-year-old daughter of an Army chaplain named Aquino as her abuser. [1] — Marcus Parks "In 1987, a 3-year-old accused Michael Aquino of Satanic ritual abuse at a Presidio daycare. He wasn't even in San Francisco when it happene…" 1:03:30 Police raided his San Francisco home, found nothing, and it was eventually proven in court that Aquino was in Washington DC when the alleged abuse occurred. He sued every author who named him as a suspect and won every case. It didn't matter. The accusation followed him for the rest of his life, and Marcus notes with some bleakness that even now, the hosts still receive emails calling Aquino a child molester. He died in 2019 by self-inflicted gunshot, facing terminal cancer.
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LaVey's association with neo-Nazis seems at odds with his genuine friendship with Sammy Davis Jr., but Henry reveals a key letter explaining LaVey's motive: he believed neo-Nazis were not serious ideologues and that he could exploit their anti-Christian sentiment to fold them into a broader Satanist coalition alongside Jews. His plan was common-enemy logic: forget the Jews, the real enemy is the Catholic Church. Marcus calls this a violation of the Nazi bar principle — as soon as you let Nazis in, every other Nazi treats your space as safe harbor. [1] — Henry Zebrowski "Fascism uses nostalgia as a weapon. Always." 1:11:56 Henry goes further: LaVey's willingness to associate with anyone was really a symptom of his desperate need to be loved, the same vacuous hole that drove L. Ron Hubbard and every other cult leader. He weaponized this need into the concept of Emotional Crystallization Initiation — surrounding himself with images of his youth, refusing to engage with youth culture — which Henry argues is precisely the mechanism that froze LaVey in place while the world moved on without him. Fascism uses nostalgia as a weapon. Always.
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James Madol was raised in upstate New York by an antisemitic mother and found refuge in sci-fi as a teenager, absorbing the heaven-storming scientists and master races of 1930s pulp fiction. He formed the Animist Party in a pulp magazine in 1945 — an admirably ballsy year to launch a fascist movement — before taking over the National Renaissance Party from its elderly founder in 1949. [1] — Marcus Parks "In 1963, neo-Nazi James Madol's National Renaissance Party counter-protested CORE civil rights demonstrators outside White Castle restauran…" 1:19:00 Madol's most memorable moment came in 1963's White Castle Plot, in which his NRP showed up to counter-protest civil rights demonstrators from CORE outside Bronx White Castle restaurants. Three of his stormtroopers got beaten up by CORE members, went to the police to report it, and a detective glanced at their truck and saw a .22 revolver, tear gas guns, a crossbow with a steel-tipped arrow, a butcher knife, a switchblade, a straight razor, and an axe all in plain view. Eight members were arrested. When Madol died of cancer in 1979, his mother handed the NRP's entire archives to a loyalist at the funeral; the loyalist hit a concrete abutment on the highway home and was killed instantly, the records blowing away as New York City litter. The NRP ended within days of Madol's death.
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The 1970s were, in retrospect, the last fun years of the Church of Satan. As the '80s began, the FBI received a fantastical informant tip claiming LaVey was the go-between in a plot to murder Senator Ted Kennedy involving 8 kilos of hash paid to the Chicago Mafia. The FBI, DEA, and Secret Service set up a blockade at O'Hare Airport and raided the Black House on Halloween 1980. They found a 50-year-old man sitting at home who told them he admired the Kennedys and was morally opposed to drugs — which was, bizarrely, the truth. [1] — Marcus Parks "The FBI, Secret Service, and DEA set up a blockade at O'Hare Airport, monitored incoming flights for days, and raided the Black House on Ha…" 1:26:20 More damaging than the raid was the book Michelle Remembers, published that same year, which claimed to document genuine Satanic ritual abuse and was taken extremely seriously. The McMartin Preschool case followed in 1983 — 300 allegations, zero convictions, seven years of trial, possibly the longest in California history. The media largely sided with prosecutors and regularly named the Church of Satan as a main culprit. Anton LaVey, rather than responding, simply retreated further into himself.
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The Satanic Panic was the moment Anton LaVey most needed Diane Hegarty, and the moment she finally left him. In 1984, after years of emotional and physical abuse including a headlock that knocked her unconscious, Diane filed a restraining order and walked out. [1] — Marcus Parks "Diane Hegarty left LaVey in 1984 after abuse: Diane Hegarty left LaVey in 1984 after years of abuse — without her, LaVey had no one to mana…" 1:32:10 Without Diane, who had been managing virtually every aspect of the Church's operations, LaVey admitted he had no one to handle media. His daughter Zeena — 22 at the time — stepped in as spokesperson on a temporary basis that lasted years. She appeared on Phil Donahue, Sally Jesse Raphael, and everywhere else, debating Christians and methodically deconstructing the Satanic abuse myth. Her appearances caused Church membership to skyrocket throughout the '80s — the ultimate irony of Christian suppression breeding popularity. By 1990, however, Zeena had also had enough of her father, resigned from the Church, renounced him publicly, and joined Michael Aquino's Temple of Set, where she immediately became a high priestess. The FBI issued a report in 1992 refuting all Satanic abuse conspiracy theories, but Zeena was gone.
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By 1984, even as the Church faced its worst public crisis, 54-year-old Anton LaVey was beginning a relationship with 17-year-old Blanche Barton, who had written him a fan letter from college. She would eventually write his official biography — a document Henry notes is stuffed with easily disproved lies. [1] — Marcus Parks "Before any murders, Richard Ramirez politely stopped LaVey on a San Francisco street and asked to talk Satanism. LaVey blew him off. After …" 1:40:40 LaVey's last notable brush with cultural relevance came through serial killer Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker, who had driven to San Francisco specifically to meet LaVey and politely stopped him in the street to ask for a few minutes of conversation. LaVey brushed him off and told him to write a letter instead. After Ramirez was arrested and branded America's most evil serial killer, LaVey told the press he was 'the nicest, most polite young man you'd ever want to meet' — one last button-press from a man running on fumes. Legal battles over the Church's properties with Diane dragged through the '80s. By 1993 LaVey had lost the Black House; a friend bought it back and let him live out his remaining years there at someone else's allowance. He stopped giving interviews and was hospitalized repeatedly in the final months of his life.
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Anton LaVey died October 29, 1997, of respiratory failure — but he had pre-arranged his death certificate to say October 31st, Halloween. Even his death was a performance, and as Marcus puts it, LaVey believed there was never any reason for the truth to get in the way of a good story. [1] — Henry Zebrowski "The first half of your life is spent changing the world. The second half of your life should be spent having the world change you, because …" 1:23:02 Henry then delivers the Gandalf allegory he had promised since the opening: Gandalf the Grey had to die to become Gandalf the White. The first half of a life is for changing the world; the second half should be for letting the world change you in return. LaVey refused that transformation. He crystallized himself in mythology, surrounded himself with his own youth, refused to evolve, and became the thing he never wanted to be — a bitter, nostalgic old man clinging to a past that no longer needed him. He could have defused the Satanic Panic, could have opened the Church to public scrutiny, could have taken responsibility for what he'd built. He did none of it. That, Henry argues, is why old wizards die hard.
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Marcus directs listeners to Patreon.com/lastpodcastontheleft and the show's Netflix presence before Ed Larson lists three remaining JK Ultra live show dates: June 27th in Grand Rapids, July 17th in Tulsa, and July 18th in Oklahoma City. Henry and Ed plug their new movie show 'Available' on SiriusXM Podcast Plus with video on Patreon every Thursday. Ed teases an October Side Stories Halloween show returning to Humboldt. A cross-promotion plug for Morbid Podcast runs, followed by a LifeLock ad. The episode closes with competitive hailing — after brief deliberation, the entire group lands on Sammy Davis Jr. as the episode's most worthy recipient of a hail. Hail Sammy.
- Grotto
- A local satellite chapter of the Church of Satan, operating semi-autonomously under the oversight of the central organization in San Francisco.
- Baphomet
- An occult symbol used by the Church of Satan — a winged goat-headed figure associated with dark spiritual knowledge, rendered as a medallion awarded to members.
- Temple of Set
- A Satanic splinter organization founded by Michael Aquino in 1975 after he left the Church of Satan, focused on the ancient Egyptian deity Set as the true identity of Satan.
- Setian / Setianism
- The belief system of the Temple of Set, which holds that the biblical Satan is actually the ancient Egyptian god Set, deity of storms and chaos.
- The Cloven Hoof
- The Church of Satan's internal newsletter, used for official communications, policy announcements, and theological debates among members.
- Lesser magic
- In LaVeyan Satanism, practical techniques of personal influence and manipulation used in everyday life — charm, psychology, appearance — as opposed to Greater Magic's ritualistic ceremony.
- Greater magic
- Ceremonial ritual practice in LaVeyan Satanism designed to produce change through emotional catharsis and psychodrama, as opposed to everyday Lesser Magic.
- Ahnenerbe
- Heinrich Himmler's SS research institute dedicated to proving the mythical Aryan racial heritage through archaeology, occultism, and pseudoscience.
- Wewelsburg Castle
- A castle in Germany that SS chief Heinrich Himmler intended to transform into the ceremonial headquarters for his Nazi occult chivalric order.
- ECI (Emotional Crystallization Initiation)
- A concept developed by Anton LaVey involving surrounding oneself with images and artifacts of one's younger self to preserve one's psychological essence — described by Henry Zebrowski as actually accelerating stagnation.
- Theistic Satanism
- A form of Satanism in which practitioners genuinely believe Satan is a real, existing deity — as opposed to LaVey's atheistic, theatrical version.
- Order of the Trapezoid
- A chivalric order within the Temple of Set, established by Michael Aquino following his 1983 ritual at Wewelsburg Castle, modeled partly on Himmler's envisioned Aryan knighthood.
- Indulgences
- In medieval Catholic practice, payments made to the Church to reduce punishment for sins — used as an analogy here for LaVey's decision to sell initiatory ranks within the Church of Satan.
- priggish
- Self-righteously moralistic and disapproving of others' behavior; used here by Marcus Parks to describe Christopher Lee's manner as perceived by Anton LaVey.
- vaunt
- To boast or brag about something — relevant here in the context of LaVey's tendency to exaggerate his own magical powers and claimed associations.
- National Renaissance Party (NRP)
- An American neo-Nazi organization founded after World War II by Kurt Mertig and later led by James Madol, mixing fascist ideology with occultism and science fiction.
- Book of Coming Forth by Night
- The foundational text of the Temple of Set, written by Michael Aquino, claiming to have been received through automatic writing — its name derived from the Egyptian Book of the Dead.
- Michelle Remembers
- A 1980 book widely regarded as the catalyst for the Satanic Panic, falsely claiming to be an autobiographical account of a woman who had undergone Satanic ritual abuse as a child.
Chapter 2 · 04:02
Sammy Davis Jr. Becomes the World's First Black Jewish Satanic Warlock
Picking up from the previous episode, Marcus Parks traces the arc from NBC's TV movie 'Poor Devil' — in which Sammy Davis Jr. played a low-level demon — to Davis's formal induction as the Church of Satan's honorary warlock. Michael Aquino had called the show 'a magnificent commercial for the church,' and Marcus agrees it was genuinely Satanic in its message: focused, justified revenge that hurts only the deserving. Anton LaVey's antenna went up, but he kept his distance out of a pee-shyness about Hollywood. [1] — Marcus Parks "Sammy Davis Jr. didn't just flirt with Satanism — he went all in. Within a month of receiving the Church of Satan's letter, he accepted his…" 04:02 Davis, however, accepted the warlock offer within a month, and on the night of his concert — Friday the 13th, at the Circle Star Theater, a name that encodes a pentagram — he received his Baphomet medallion backstage before nearly 4,000 fans. He went out wearing it on his chest and closed with Sammy's near-Satanic anthem, 'I Gotta Be Me.' Nothing in the world could have made Sammy happier.
Claims made here
Sammy Davis Jr. didn't just flirt with Satanism — he went all in. Within a month of receiving the Church of Satan's letter, he accepted his honorary warlock title and wore the Baphomet medallion on stage in front of 4,000 people on Friday the 13th at the Circle Star Theater. His tame nights were with the Satanists.
Sammy Davis Jr. accepted honorary warlock status from the Church of Satan within a month, receiving a Baphomet medallion backstage before a concert on Friday the 13th.
When Michael Aquino wrote to LaVey excitedly about giving Satanic Bibles to Sammy Davis Jr.'s PR team, LaVey shut it down immediately: ignore the handlers, go directly to the celebrity. It's the most lucid, practical wisdom LaVey ever gave — and it came from a man who never actually followed it himself.
Chapter 3 · 11:40
Piss Magic, Coffee & Cake: The Real Satanic Mass
Henry drops a bombshell from Michael Aquino's Church of Satan history: the published Satanic Bible heavily sanitized the actual ritual, which included a female altar masturbating a consecrated host to completion inside her, the host then dissolved in urine and drunk communally, and LaVey concluding with a solo finish. The hosts riff on the absurdity before Marcus brings it back to the larger point — these rituals were controlled ceremonial theater, and after the mass everyone had coffee and cake. This context makes the Sammy Davis Jr. friendship funnier: Davis was a whiskey-and-cocaine man who had specifically invited two young witches to his first gathering with Anton and Diane, hoping for an orgy with the head freaks. Instead, he got sober intellectual conversation about Satanist theology and a German silent film. Davis's silver cocaine bowl got pushed behind the bar. His nights with the Satanists were, in the end, his most wholesome.
Chapter 4 · 18:20
Christopher Lee, Frank Sinatra, and the Collapse of LaVey's Hollywood Dream
As Anton LaVey finally began to feel like he belonged at Davis's Hollywood parties, his insecurities sabotaged him. When Davis invited both LaVey and his Poor Devil co-star Christopher Lee to a dinner party, LaVey bristled — Lee was another spooky figure, and LaVey wanted to be Sammy's only one. What LaVey didn't know is that Lee was a committed Christian occultist who believed Satanism was folly. When LaVey baited Lee by insisting Bela Lugosi was a superior Dracula to Lee's ten portrayals, Davis had to physically step between them before a fight broke out — a comic image given that the 5'4" Davis was mediating between two men well over 6 feet. [1] — Marcus Parks "Sammy Davis Jr. diagnosed with terminal throat cancer, 1989: When Sammy Davis Jr.'s 1989 tribute show aired after his terminal cancer diagn…" 36:26 More damage came from Frank Sinatra, who told Davis to cool it with the Satanists in the late '70s, apparently unaware these were Sammy's most pharmaceutical-free evenings. The friendship faded, and when Davis was diagnosed with terminal cancer and his 1989 tribute was televised, LaVey watched from home. He hadn't spoken to Sammy in a decade, and the chance to break into Hollywood through the greatest entertainer alive had evaporated permanently.
Claims made here
Sammy Davis Jr.'s 1980 memoir 'Hollywood in a Suitcase' originally contained passages about joining the Church of Satan and calling himself a Satanist, but all such mentions were removed before publication due to the Satanic Panic.
Frank Sinatra told Sammy Davis Jr. to cool it with the drugs, booze, and above all, the Satanists. The delicious irony: Davis's nights with LaVey were his most sober and sexless. Sinatra should have been encouraging the Satanist friendship, not killing it.
When Sammy Davis Jr.'s 1989 tribute show aired after his terminal cancer diagnosis, Anton LaVey was not invited and watched from home, marking the definitive end of their friendship.
Chapter 6 · 42:40
Aquino's Reformation: The Temple of Set Is Born
The episode now turns to the inner mechanics of the Church of Satan's most significant schism. The core problem: LaVey was an atheist who used Satan as theatrical branding, while Aquino genuinely believed Satan was a real, contactable deity. Henry notes that Aquino was — accidentally — just reinventing Christianity with worse aesthetics. The breaking point came when money ran short in 1975 and LaVey decided to simply sell initiatory ranks, a move Aquino compared to the Catholic Church selling indulgences. [1] — Marcus Parks "Aquino left Church of Satan in 1975 to found Temple of Set: Michael Aquino left the Church of Satan in 1975 after LaVey began selling churc…" 45:15 Aquino played Martin Luther, published his objections, and left, taking a fair number of other disillusioned Satanists with him. His new organization, the Temple of Set, cast the biblical Satan as the ancient Egyptian deity Set, god of storms and desert, the murderer of Osiris. Henry points out that Aquino also penned his foundational text — received, he claimed, through automatic writing like Aleister Crowley's Book of the Law — and named it The Book of Coming Forth by Night, apparently unaware of the avalanche of ejaculate jokes that would follow.
Claims made here
Michael Aquino left the Church of Satan in 1975 after Anton LaVey decided to sell initiatory ranks within the church for money, and went on to found the Temple of Set.
Michael Aquino actually believed Satan was a deity you could talk to. LaVey was an atheist using Satan as theatrical branding. When LaVey started selling church ranks for cash, Aquino played Martin Luther — he nailed his thesis and left to start the Temple of Set. He was just making Protestantism with worse aesthetics.
LaVey began selling church ranks for money in 1975, prompting Aquino to compare it to the Catholic selling of indulgences and ultimately causing the Church of Satan's major schism.
Michael Aquino left the Church of Satan in 1975 after LaVey began selling church ranks for money, founding the Temple of Set as a more esoteric Satanic movement.
Chapter 7 · 51:40
Aquino Goes Full Himmler: Wewelsburg Castle and Nazi Occultism
After founding the Temple of Set, Michael Aquino settled into the role of an academic, earning a PhD in political science and taking an adjunct professor post at Golden Gate University, while continuing to publish a scathing history of the Church of Satan that debunked LaVey's many self-invented myths. But his more disturbing parallel obsession was with Nazi occultism. In 1983, on a UN work trip to Europe, Aquino detoured to Wewelsburg Castle — Heinrich Himmler's intended ceremonial HQ for his Aryan knighthood — and performed a ritual in the underground chamber Himmler had designed for his own rites. [1] — Marcus Parks "Aquino performed Nazi ritual at Wewelsburg Castle in 1983: Michael Aquino used UN contacts to sneak into Wewelsburg Castle in 1983 and perf…" 57:12 Out of this came the Second Order of the Trapezoid, which Aquino decreed was a chivalric order of occult knights. He denied sympathy for Nazi ideology while simultaneously arguing that Himmler had genuinely summoned an extraordinary psychic force that had merely been 'misdirected.' Henry unpacks the incoherence: you cannot separate a magical tradition from the Holocaust that powered it, full stop. It was not a whoopsie.
Claims made here
Michael Aquino performed a magical ritual inside Wewelsburg Castle in Germany in 1983, gaining access through his United Nations work trip credentials.
In 1983, Michael Aquino used UN work trip credentials to access Wewelsburg Castle — Heinrich Himmler's planned occult headquarters — and performed a ritual in its underground ceremonial space. Out of it came the Second Order of the Trapezoid, a chivalric order of knights. He was, as the hosts note, at least as much of a nerd as Himmler.
Michael Aquino used UN contacts to sneak into Wewelsburg Castle in 1983 and perform an occult ritual in Himmler's ceremonial underground chamber.
Chapter 8 · 1:00:00
The Satanic Panic Arrives: The Presidio Case and Aquino's Ruin
The Satanic Panic was a machinery of false accusation built from leading questions posed to small children who wanted to please adults and be rewarded. Investigators treated every wild claim as evidence, and a nationwide Satanic underground that never existed was constructed entirely from the statements of 3-year-olds. Michael Aquino became one of its most prominent victims when 58 children were allegedly abused at the Presidio Army Base daycare in San Francisco, and a 3-year-old daughter of an Army chaplain named Aquino as her abuser. [1] — Marcus Parks "In 1987, a 3-year-old accused Michael Aquino of Satanic ritual abuse at a Presidio daycare. He wasn't even in San Francisco when it happene…" 1:03:30 Police raided his San Francisco home, found nothing, and it was eventually proven in court that Aquino was in Washington DC when the alleged abuse occurred. He sued every author who named him as a suspect and won every case. It didn't matter. The accusation followed him for the rest of his life, and Marcus notes with some bleakness that even now, the hosts still receive emails calling Aquino a child molester. He died in 2019 by self-inflicted gunshot, facing terminal cancer.
Claims made here
58 children were allegedly abused at the Presidio Army Base daycare, and Michael Aquino was named as a suspect in 1987 by a 3-year-old daughter of an Army chaplain.
Michael Aquino was proven to not be in San Francisco when the Presidio abuse was alleged to have occurred — he was provably in Washington DC — and won lawsuits against everyone who published books naming him as a suspect.
Michael Aquino died in 2019 by self-inflicted gunshot while facing terminal cancer.
The entire satanic underground that terrified America didn't exist. It was constructed from leading questions asked to kids who just wanted to please adults. Children kept saying yes because they got rewarded for saying yes, and investigators took every wild statement seriously until a nationwide moral panic was born.
In 1987, a 3-year-old accused Michael Aquino of Satanic ritual abuse at a Presidio daycare. He wasn't even in San Francisco when it happened — he was provably in Washington DC. He won every lawsuit. It didn't matter. The accusation followed him until he shot himself in 2019 facing terminal cancer.
Aquino was proven innocent of the Presidio abuse allegations — he wasn't even in San Francisco at the time — won his lawsuits, but the stigma followed him until his 2019 death.
Michael Aquino died in 2019 by self-inflicted gunshot while facing terminal cancer, capping a life defined by ideological battles and false accusations.
Chapter 9 · 1:07:40
Anton LaVey and the Neo-Nazis: The Nazi Bar Principle
LaVey's association with neo-Nazis seems at odds with his genuine friendship with Sammy Davis Jr., but Henry reveals a key letter explaining LaVey's motive: he believed neo-Nazis were not serious ideologues and that he could exploit their anti-Christian sentiment to fold them into a broader Satanist coalition alongside Jews. His plan was common-enemy logic: forget the Jews, the real enemy is the Catholic Church. Marcus calls this a violation of the Nazi bar principle — as soon as you let Nazis in, every other Nazi treats your space as safe harbor. [1] — Henry Zebrowski "Fascism uses nostalgia as a weapon. Always." 1:11:56 Henry goes further: LaVey's willingness to associate with anyone was really a symptom of his desperate need to be loved, the same vacuous hole that drove L. Ron Hubbard and every other cult leader. He weaponized this need into the concept of Emotional Crystallization Initiation — surrounding himself with images of his youth, refusing to engage with youth culture — which Henry argues is precisely the mechanism that froze LaVey in place while the world moved on without him. Fascism uses nostalgia as a weapon. Always.
LaVey wasn't fascist by ideology — he genuinely thought he could peel Nazis away from antisemitism by pointing them at a common enemy: the Catholic Church. His plan was to unite Nazis and Jews in hatred of Christianity. He didn't understand that once you let Nazis in, your space becomes a safe space for every Nazi. Basic. Fatal.
LaVey created a concept he called Emotional Crystallization Initiation — surrounding himself with pictures of his younger self and refusing to engage with youth culture. He thought it preserved his essence. What it actually did was freeze him in amber, making him the thing he hated: a nostalgic old man clinging to a past that didn't want him back.
LaVey's 'Emotional Crystallization Initiation' ritual — surrounding himself with images of his youth — ironically accelerated his psychological stagnation and creative death.
Chapter 10 · 1:15:00
James Madol: America's Nerdiest Neo-Nazi
James Madol was raised in upstate New York by an antisemitic mother and found refuge in sci-fi as a teenager, absorbing the heaven-storming scientists and master races of 1930s pulp fiction. He formed the Animist Party in a pulp magazine in 1945 — an admirably ballsy year to launch a fascist movement — before taking over the National Renaissance Party from its elderly founder in 1949. [1] — Marcus Parks "In 1963, neo-Nazi James Madol's National Renaissance Party counter-protested CORE civil rights demonstrators outside White Castle restauran…" 1:19:00 Madol's most memorable moment came in 1963's White Castle Plot, in which his NRP showed up to counter-protest civil rights demonstrators from CORE outside Bronx White Castle restaurants. Three of his stormtroopers got beaten up by CORE members, went to the police to report it, and a detective glanced at their truck and saw a .22 revolver, tear gas guns, a crossbow with a steel-tipped arrow, a butcher knife, a switchblade, a straight razor, and an axe all in plain view. Eight members were arrested. When Madol died of cancer in 1979, his mother handed the NRP's entire archives to a loyalist at the funeral; the loyalist hit a concrete abutment on the highway home and was killed instantly, the records blowing away as New York City litter. The NRP ended within days of Madol's death.
Claims made here
James Madol's neo-Nazi National Renaissance Party formed in 1949, and Madol's mother handed all NRP records to a loyalist at Madol's 1979 funeral, who died in a car crash on the way home, scattering the records on the highway.
In 1963, neo-Nazi James Madol's National Renaissance Party counter-protested CORE civil rights demonstrators outside White Castle restaurants in the Bronx. Three of his stormtroopers got beat up, went to the police to report it, and the detective found their truck full of revolvers, crossbows, tear gas guns, and an axe in plain view. Eight members arrested.
The NRP ended farcically when its records, entrusted to a loyalist at Madol's 1979 funeral, blew away on a New York highway after the man died in a crash on his way home.
Gandalf had to die as Gandalf the Grey to be reborn as Gandalf the White. LaVey refused to die the death his first phase required. He crystallized himself in his own mythology, surrounded himself with his youth, and became a bitter relic. Every powerful occult figure — Crowley, Blavatsky, LaVey — fails the same way. They refuse the third phase.
Chapter 11 · 1:24:20
The FBI Halloween Raid and the Satanic Panic's Grip on LaVey
The 1970s were, in retrospect, the last fun years of the Church of Satan. As the '80s began, the FBI received a fantastical informant tip claiming LaVey was the go-between in a plot to murder Senator Ted Kennedy involving 8 kilos of hash paid to the Chicago Mafia. The FBI, DEA, and Secret Service set up a blockade at O'Hare Airport and raided the Black House on Halloween 1980. They found a 50-year-old man sitting at home who told them he admired the Kennedys and was morally opposed to drugs — which was, bizarrely, the truth. [1] — Marcus Parks "The FBI, Secret Service, and DEA set up a blockade at O'Hare Airport, monitored incoming flights for days, and raided the Black House on Ha…" 1:26:20 More damaging than the raid was the book Michelle Remembers, published that same year, which claimed to document genuine Satanic ritual abuse and was taken extremely seriously. The McMartin Preschool case followed in 1983 — 300 allegations, zero convictions, seven years of trial, possibly the longest in California history. The media largely sided with prosecutors and regularly named the Church of Satan as a main culprit. Anton LaVey, rather than responding, simply retreated further into himself.
Claims made here
Anton LaVey took credit for causing the 1984 McDonald's Massacre in San Ysidro, in which James Huberty opened fire and killed 22 people, claiming he had written a magical intention letter when summoned to court over a restraining order by Diane Hegarty.
On Halloween 1980, the FBI, Secret Service, and DEA set up a blockade at Chicago's O'Hare Airport and raided the Church of Satan's Black House, acting on a false informant tip that LaVey was involved in a plot to murder Senator Ted Kennedy.
The FBI, Secret Service, and DEA set up a blockade at O'Hare Airport, monitored incoming flights for days, and raided the Black House on Halloween 1980 — all based on a fabricated tip about a Kennedy assassination plot. They found a bored 50-year-old. He told them he admired Senator Kennedy and was morally opposed to drugs.
On Halloween 1980, the FBI, Secret Service, and DEA raided LaVey's Black House over a false informant tip about a plot to murder Ted Kennedy — and found nothing.
Chapter 12 · 1:32:10
Diane Hegarty Leaves and Zeena Takes the Wheel
The Satanic Panic was the moment Anton LaVey most needed Diane Hegarty, and the moment she finally left him. In 1984, after years of emotional and physical abuse including a headlock that knocked her unconscious, Diane filed a restraining order and walked out. [1] — Marcus Parks "Diane Hegarty left LaVey in 1984 after abuse: Diane Hegarty left LaVey in 1984 after years of abuse — without her, LaVey had no one to mana…" 1:32:10 Without Diane, who had been managing virtually every aspect of the Church's operations, LaVey admitted he had no one to handle media. His daughter Zeena — 22 at the time — stepped in as spokesperson on a temporary basis that lasted years. She appeared on Phil Donahue, Sally Jesse Raphael, and everywhere else, debating Christians and methodically deconstructing the Satanic abuse myth. Her appearances caused Church membership to skyrocket throughout the '80s — the ultimate irony of Christian suppression breeding popularity. By 1990, however, Zeena had also had enough of her father, resigned from the Church, renounced him publicly, and joined Michael Aquino's Temple of Set, where she immediately became a high priestess. The FBI issued a report in 1992 refuting all Satanic abuse conspiracy theories, but Zeena was gone.
Claims made here
The McMartin Preschool case in 1983 featured 300 allegations of Satanic ritual abuse, produced no convictions, and lasted 7 years — believed to be the longest trial in California history.
The ABC news show 20/20 in 1985 accused Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible of being responsible for America's supposed rash of child daycare ritual abuses.
The FBI issued a report in 1992 refuting all criminal conspiracy theories concerning Satanic ritual abuse.
Diane Hegarty left LaVey in 1984 after years of abuse — without her, LaVey had no one to manage the church and became an increasingly isolated, lazy recluse.
The McMartin Preschool case had 300 allegations of Satanic ritual abuse, lasted 7 years with zero convictions, and is believed to be one of the longest trials in American history.
While Anton LaVey rotted on the vine, his 22-year-old daughter Zeena appeared on Donahue, Sally Jesse Raphael, and every platform she could find to debunk Satanic ritual abuse claims. Church of Satan membership skyrocketed. The FBI issued a full exonerating report in 1992. Then Zeena quit, renounced her father, and joined Michael Aquino's Temple of Set.
At 54, LaVey began a relationship with 17-year-old Blanche Barton in 1984, who later wrote his official but heavily falsified biography.
Zeena LaVey's media appearances during the Satanic Panic ironically caused Church of Satan membership to skyrocket, demonstrating how suppression breeds popularity.
Chapter 13 · 1:40:10
LaVey's Endgame: Blanche, Ramirez, and One Last Lie
By 1984, even as the Church faced its worst public crisis, 54-year-old Anton LaVey was beginning a relationship with 17-year-old Blanche Barton, who had written him a fan letter from college. She would eventually write his official biography — a document Henry notes is stuffed with easily disproved lies. [1] — Marcus Parks "Before any murders, Richard Ramirez politely stopped LaVey on a San Francisco street and asked to talk Satanism. LaVey blew him off. After …" 1:40:40 LaVey's last notable brush with cultural relevance came through serial killer Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker, who had driven to San Francisco specifically to meet LaVey and politely stopped him in the street to ask for a few minutes of conversation. LaVey brushed him off and told him to write a letter instead. After Ramirez was arrested and branded America's most evil serial killer, LaVey told the press he was 'the nicest, most polite young man you'd ever want to meet' — one last button-press from a man running on fumes. Legal battles over the Church's properties with Diane dragged through the '80s. By 1993 LaVey had lost the Black House; a friend bought it back and let him live out his remaining years there at someone else's allowance. He stopped giving interviews and was hospitalized repeatedly in the final months of his life.
Before any murders, Richard Ramirez politely stopped LaVey on a San Francisco street and asked to talk Satanism. LaVey blew him off. After Ramirez was branded America's most evil serial killer, LaVey told the press he was 'the nicest, most polite young man you'd ever want to meet.' One last button-press from a man running on empty.
Anton LaVey died October 29, 1997, of respiratory failure. He had pre-arranged his death certificate to read October 31st — Halloween. Even his own death was a performance. He never let the truth get in the way of a good story, not even at the very end.
Chapter 14 · 1:51:20
Death on Halloween: LaVey's Final Performance and the Gandalf Thesis
Anton LaVey died October 29, 1997, of respiratory failure — but he had pre-arranged his death certificate to say October 31st, Halloween. Even his death was a performance, and as Marcus puts it, LaVey believed there was never any reason for the truth to get in the way of a good story. [1] — Henry Zebrowski "The first half of your life is spent changing the world. The second half of your life should be spent having the world change you, because …" 1:23:02 Henry then delivers the Gandalf allegory he had promised since the opening: Gandalf the Grey had to die to become Gandalf the White. The first half of a life is for changing the world; the second half should be for letting the world change you in return. LaVey refused that transformation. He crystallized himself in mythology, surrounded himself with his own youth, refused to evolve, and became the thing he never wanted to be — a bitter, nostalgic old man clinging to a past that no longer needed him. He could have defused the Satanic Panic, could have opened the Church to public scrutiny, could have taken responsibility for what he'd built. He did none of it. That, Henry argues, is why old wizards die hard.
Claims made here
Anton LaVey died on October 29, 1997, of respiratory failure, but had arranged for his death certificate to list October 31st (Halloween) as the date of death.
LaVey died October 29, 1997, but arranged his death certificate to say October 31st (Halloween), proving he believed the truth should never get in the way of a good story.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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Anton LaVey's former right-hand man who founded the Temple of Set after leaving the Church of Satan in 1975 over ideological and financial disputes.
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Entertainer and Rat Pack member who became the Church of Satan's most devoted celebrity member and honorary warlock.
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Co-founder of the Church of Satan and LaVey's longtime partner, described as the operational brain of the organization who left LaVey in 1984 after years of abuse.
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Leader of the neo-Nazi National Renaissance Party who associated with Anton LaVey's Church of Satan and is discussed as an example of LaVey's dangerous associations with fringe extremists.
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Anton LaVey's daughter who served as the Church of Satan's spokesperson during the Satanic Panic before resigning, renouncing her father, and joining Michael Aquino's Temple of Set.
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British actor and Dracula portrayer who attended a dinner party with Anton LaVey; a committed Christian occultist who nearly came to blows with LaVey over a Dracula debate.
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Rat Pack leader who pressured Sammy Davis Jr. to distance himself from Anton LaVey and the Church of Satan in the late 1970s.
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Serial killer known as the Night Stalker who briefly met LaVey before his crimes; LaVey later described him as 'the nicest, most polite young man' for one final burst of infamy.
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Nazi SS chief whose occult interests and Wewelsburg Castle project became an obsession for Michael Aquino, drawing accusations of Nazi sympathy against both Aquino and LaVey.
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17-year-old who began a relationship with 54-year-old Anton LaVey in 1984 and later wrote his official but heavily falsified biography.
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The Satanic organization founded by Anton LaVey, discussed throughout the episode as it experienced celebrity endorsement, internal schism, and Satanic Panic-era attacks.
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Satanic splinter organization founded by Michael Aquino in 1975, focused on the Egyptian deity Set as the true identity of Satan.
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American neo-Nazi organization led by James Madol that had associations with Anton LaVey's Church of Satan and was involved in the 1963 White Castle Plot before dissolving at Madol's death in 1979.
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Daycare at the center of the 1983 Satanic ritual abuse case that became the longest trial in California history, with 300 unfounded allegations and zero convictions.
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US Army base in San Francisco where 58 children were allegedly abused in a Satanic ritual abuse investigation that falsely implicated Michael Aquino in 1987.
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German castle intended by Heinrich Himmler as the ceremonial HQ for his Nazi occult order, where Michael Aquino performed a ritual in 1983 to found the Second Order of the Trapezoid.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Sammy Davis Jr. received his Warlock Ordainment Certificate and official Baphomet medallion backstage before a concert in front of almost 4,000 people at the Circle Star Theater on Friday the 13th.
Sammy Davis Jr.'s 1980 memoir 'Hollywood in a Suitcase' originally contained passages about joining the Church of Satan and calling himself a Satanist, but all such mentions were removed before publication due to the Satanic Panic.
Michael Aquino left the Church of Satan in 1975 after Anton LaVey decided to sell initiatory ranks within the church for money, and went on to found the Temple of Set.
Michael Aquino performed a magical ritual inside Wewelsburg Castle in Germany in 1983, gaining access through his United Nations work trip credentials.
58 children were allegedly abused at the Presidio Army Base daycare, and Michael Aquino was named as a suspect in 1987 by a 3-year-old daughter of an Army chaplain.
Michael Aquino was proven to not be in San Francisco when the Presidio abuse was alleged to have occurred — he was provably in Washington DC — and won lawsuits against everyone who published books naming him as a suspect.
Michael Aquino died in 2019 by self-inflicted gunshot while facing terminal cancer.
The McMartin Preschool case in 1983 featured 300 allegations of Satanic ritual abuse, produced no convictions, and lasted 7 years — believed to be the longest trial in California history.
The ABC news show 20/20 in 1985 accused Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible of being responsible for America's supposed rash of child daycare ritual abuses.
The FBI issued a report in 1992 refuting all criminal conspiracy theories concerning Satanic ritual abuse.
Anton LaVey died on October 29, 1997, of respiratory failure, but had arranged for his death certificate to list October 31st (Halloween) as the date of death.
James Madol's neo-Nazi National Renaissance Party formed in 1949, and Madol's mother handed all NRP records to a loyalist at Madol's 1979 funeral, who died in a car crash on the way home, scattering the records on the highway.
On Halloween 1980, the FBI, Secret Service, and DEA set up a blockade at Chicago's O'Hare Airport and raided the Church of Satan's Black House, acting on a false informant tip that LaVey was involved in a plot to murder Senator Ted Kennedy.
Anton LaVey took credit for causing the 1984 McDonald's Massacre in San Ysidro, in which James Huberty opened fire and killed 22 people, claiming he had written a magical intention letter when summoned to court over a restraining order by Diane Hegarty.
Anton LaVey's 2-volume 'Church of Satan' history written by Michael Aquino totals approximately 700 pages including appendices.
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