Speaker
Henry Zebrowski
Appearances over time
3 episodes
Episodes
3Podcasts
Quotes & moments
Separate from the murder trial, Casey Anthony was convicted of check fraud for stealing her friend's checkbook and writing bad checks totaling $605.
LaVey's 'Emotional Crystallization Initiation' ritual — surrounding himself with images of his youth — ironically accelerated his psychological stagnation and creative death.
Casey Anthony's Firefox browser history contained searches for 'foolproof suffocation methods' and questions about how long asphyxiation takes to kill. None of it was ever shown to the jury because investigators only checked her Internet Explorer history — a catastrophic technological oversight that effectively handed her an acquittal.
Zanny the Nanny wasn't a real person — it was Xanax. Casey Anthony allegedly sedated Caylee with the drug to keep her quiet while she went out partying. An innocent woman named Zenaida Fernandez Gonzalez, who shared a similar-sounding name, lost her job, her home, and received death threats as a result of Casey's fabrication.
Texas EquiSearch, a volunteer search group, deployed 4,200 personnel and $112,000 in donor funds over two years hunting for Caylee Anthony — all while Casey reportedly knew her daughter was already dead. The group sued Casey for $100,000 to recoup those wasted resources.
Caylee Anthony's skeletal remains were discovered by accident. A utility worker named Roy Cronk wandered off into a wooded area near the Anthony home to urinate, kicked what he thought was a garbage bag, and Caylee's skull tumbled out.
In 2019, Casey Anthony planned to star as herself in a low-budget movie called 'As I Was Told' — a 'racy and explicit' film that would open with scenes depicting how she became pregnant with Caylee. She demanded full editorial control. COVID killed it before it could be made.
After Casey's acquittal, Florida's Department of Children and Families released a report concluding Casey failed to protect Caylee — either through her actions or inaction — resulting in Caylee's death. It was the first official document to formally assign responsibility to Casey. While it carries no legal weight, it could be used in any future child custody proceedings.
Since 2018, Casey Anthony has been pitching a reality show called 'Casey Moving Forward,' boasting about it on a private Twitter account and comparing herself to Kim Kardashian. One anonymous network executive said it was a losing bet — but admitted he'd watch it anyway.
The Peacock docuseries 'Where the Truth Lies' marked Casey Anthony's most dramatic story revision yet. What started as the Xanny the Nanny kidnapping tale evolved into claims of a Joseph Fritzl-style house of horrors, with Casey alleging lifelong molestation by both her father and brother — and claiming Caylee was also possibly a product of incest. The hosts weren't buying it.
The last contact between Cindy and Casey Anthony ended with Cindy sending Casey a photo of the garbage bag Caylee's skeletal remains were discovered in, with the message: 'You put her there.' It came after Casey threatened to show up and take Caylee's ashes by force.
A brief Menendez brothers tangent turns into the episode's most substantive moral debate. Henry Zebrowski argued that murder should remain an uncrossable line regardless of abuse, while noting the key difference from Casey's case: Lyle and Erik's parents were alive and couldn't refute the accusations. Casey's parents, alive and fighting back, took and passed polygraph tests.
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 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.
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.
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.
George and Cindy Anthony agreed to take an FBI-administered polygraph on their A&E special to refute Casey's abuse allegations. Cindy told George beforehand she would divorce him if he failed. Both passed. Henry Zebrowski noted that passing while knowing everything was on the line actually made the result more convincing.
Analysis
What they talk about
- True Crime 44%
- Society & Culture 31%
- Religion & Spirituality 13%
- Business 6%
- History 6%
Connections
Shows they appear on and people they share episodes with. Drag to explore.