@seraphim Mercutio was always my favourite character in the play, he was a loyal friend but his line "a plague on both your houses" really encapsulates the depth of how he felt betrayed for his service and just how petty the conflict was Screw Tybolt though, that guy was an ass
They both killed themselves cause they falsely believed the other was dead. Idk about you, but I would have seeked confirmation. I wanna go to the wake and see the body please. It is funny how Romeo and Juliet are the examples of the idealistic true lovers when they were 14 and 16, any teenage romance is laughed at and told, "you don't know what love is yet." A fucked up thing to say. Like in Forest Gump when Jenny told him he didn't know what love was. That he was too stupid too. She acts like a deplorable human being throughout the entirety of the story, not telling him he had a kid.
An interesting thing is she was a small person and the BAR (Browning Automatic Rifle) was a big gun designed for large men. The recoil was probably insufferable, I'm surprised that she was able to hit anything.
@@twistedyogert Sometimes people manage to do cool stuff, despite the odds against them. Not all of them, but this moment is up there considering her stature, it must have been a surprise.
@@twistedyogert clyde was an amateur gunsmith and had cut down Remington 11 shotguns and full auto BARs (Browning Automatic Rifles) in those days Americans could still buy machine guns freely.
I really think that John Dillinger was the maddest of madlads during that time. He shot his way out of many situations, but he didn't rob ordinary folk, and he was actually good at being a criminal
When I learned that Frank Hamer was quoted as saying, "we really popped a cap in 'em" in the aftermath of the Bonnie and Clyde ambush I just had to see how far back the phrase went. Turns out it dates back to the mid 1800s, referring to popping or busting a percussion cap while firing a black powder muzzleloader. It was originally an Army term.
the Army 1800's: we bust caps all day long! studio gangsters in the 90's: bustin caps and dropping chronic plates! studio gangsters now: mumbles for 10 minutes
My favourite film about Bonnie and Clyde is the move The Highwaymen, it treats the two of them more like horror movie monsters, only slowly showing them over time and constantly treating them as malevolent. It also shows how distasteful serial killer celebrity culture really is
@@Tom_Cruise_Missile I disagree. The best way, I have found, is to follow them as the protagonist... It's up to the writer whether to glorify or vilify them at the end of the day. The reader/viewer is (hopefully) not taken in by their shit. The problems only arise when they're made out to be 'vigilante' type characters who are really fighting against corruption or have valid reasons for committing their crimes. Of course, the Highwaymen is still an excellent movie.
According to Urban Dictionary, a chad is a residue of fecal matter; usually situated between arse cheeks after incomplete wiping and can spread to balls. How dare you insult our hero!
A relative of mine claimed to have been picked up by Bonnie once, when hitchhiking, and that she glanced meaningfully at the gun on the seat between them when she asked if he was willing to drive for them. He said no, she hesitated, then pulled over and let him out. But that relative of mine was a drunken Cajun, and I'm not 100% certain that he was the most reliable narrator.
I heard a rumor that was started in the mid 2000s said that Bonnie was found to be pregnant by the either the mortician or doctor doing her autopsy, but the feds kept it quiet so the public wouldn't be outraged by them killing a pregnant woman.
Interesting thing about the ambush that succeeded in killing Barrow and Parker. I live a couple hours from Gibsland, Louisiana, the town outside of which it happened, and the museum in town is a good authority on these events. Prentiss Oakley, the Deputy Sheriff of Bienville Parish, was a member of the ambush crew that Ranger Hamer organized upon predicting Barrow and Parker's route. For the ambush, Oakley borrowed a Remington Model 8 in .35 Rem, a semi-auto rifle he had previously borrowed from the local doctor for hunting. From his position, he got a bead on Barrow's left temple as the target vehicle slowed to a near-stop. One to seize the moment, it would seem, Oakley fired and hit Barrow's head before Hamer gave his fire command. There's sketch info on the whereabouts of the rifle in question after that, a couple of Model 8 owners claiming theirs to be the rifle used by Oakley, and urban legends that it is haunted and would fire if stored with a round in the chamber. The museum, last I visited, was trying to buy the rifle they believe is the one in question, but I can't guess how accurate that is. BTW, anyone reading this who can travel to Gibsland, I can recommend it. The museum also owns the cafe where Barrow and Parker got breakfast to-go minutes before being ventilated, and you can order the sandwiches they ordered.
The Netflix movie The highwaymen is a pretty good movie about the former Texas Rangers who tracked down Bonnie and Clyde. It's more of a detective movie then a action movie but it's pretty good.
I was absolutely terrified of Bonnie and Clyde as a kid. My moms family is from Commerce, Oklahoma. Bonnie and Clyde killed a deputy, may be called constable, and kidnapped a senior cop, in Commerce... Friends of my grandfather. Late 60s we visited and the old folks were talking about the murder as it was out in open and, outside Mickey Mantle, only thing that happened in Commerce. One problem with the discussion they had about the gangsters, they failed to mention they were dead. I was sent to park and I was convinced that Bonnie and Clyde would get me! My uncle's best friend his entire life was Charles Floyd, son of Pretty Boy Floyd. In that case everything Mr Floyd told us kids about his dad was he was a good guy overall. He didn't scare me. All of my family outside my generation are dead and gone... Time won, again
As someone from Joplin, there were a huge number of bootleggers in town back in the 30s. The out-of-work miners that had previously been the linchpin of the local economy dug a series of speakeasies and smuggler's tunnels to support the mob. They also dug connecting tunnels into the mines that allowed dozens of miles of covert movement. But most moonshiners were arrested without violence, so it really was a surprise that anyone would shoot back.
William Marshal From spare to heir, also known as "The Greatest Knight" never lost a duel or a tourney (The early medieval ones where hundreds of knights would fight a battle, not that 1v1 horse shit), Kicked the teeth in of Richard "The Lionheart" defeating his rebellion in a duel and army on the field, After the Kings death he served Richard and two other kings over his career, defeated a french invasion and reintroduced the Magna Carta.
@@greenflagracing7067 they absolutely were, it was for display purposes before the big glass case so kids wouldn't get cut up by all the sharp twisted metal leaning over the side to look into it
“With the power of love, you can do anything…except stop bullets.” Good to know. Also, it’s pretty cool to see these two get a madlad video. I read about the mob in general from around that time a little while back and their story while detailed was kind of a footnote to the others. So this was cool
There’s a museum down in the south dedicated to Bonnie and Clyde. It was fascinating. But there was also a room showing photos of their dead bodies, and mannequins dressed and fashioned as their corpses. My stomach was in knots. And I then realized the gravity of what kinda place I was in. I was in a place romanticizing their story and their love, but the reality of the death and destruction that followed them was right in front of all of us. On the plus side- the guy working and owning the place was cool as fuck and had a cat who loved pets and visiting with patrons.
I had a great uncle with the Rangers that was at the ambush site right after the shooting stopped. I've been to both of Bonnie and Clyde's gravesites. There is a lot of connections in my family to Texas law enforcement and outlaws. It's great having a family that's split between criminals and cops!
After you've been a cop for ~two years, you've been "tested." You either will respect the blue line, and you will lie for a fellow cop, even after watching that cop beat someone senseless or murder someone, or if you won't lie for that fellow cop you will be elbowed out of the profession. So therefore any cop with two + years on the job IS a criminal.
In general I'm none too keen on the romanticization of criminals. I get the appeal of outlaws who are viewed as heroes to the common folk, but there's something deeply disturbing about the media sensationalizing certain stories - and Bonnie and Clyde was always the perfect example to me. How a couple of vicious, murderers were sold as a "romeo and juliet of crime" when the reality was that they were screwing around with pretty much everyone in their "posse" kind of kills that narrative. Moreover, they were relatively young, emotionally immature, borderline mentally handicapped and their bodies were practically torn apart by the masses when they were dragged in after the roadside ambush they perished in - that was the sort of frenzy that the media had built up around them. It's just an all-around disturbing story to me.
Now that you mentioned it, "The Romeo and Juliet of crime" fits them quite well, as Romeo and Juliet is constantly called one of the greatest romance stories, when the story is actually about death, family rivalries that were basically gang wars, and stupid teenagers doing stupid shit. It is a tragedy that's been twisted by the media as a love story, when it was anything but. Quite a good description of what happened to Bonnie and Clyde. Definitely gonna use that in the future, thank you for the quote.
It's always been this way, even way back to the days of the Roman Empire and beyond. Not to get too political, but it was like that during the recent George Floyd incident. The man was a criminal who was also a victim of an overzealous police officer, but the version spun by some of the media (and adopted by many people) was that he was some sort of anti-racist hero, which to me felt very surreal.
I didn’t care for the spin that suggested that the gang weren’t that big a deal until the media made celebrities out of them. Sure they probably didn’t intend to be murderers at first, but when somebody shoots at someone because their target is between them and something they want, I’m not sure if it matters whether they’re cold-blooded killers, hot-blooded, or any temperature in between - they’re ok with murdering somebody and I have a hard time feeling sorry when they die of lead poisoning.
I am once again asking for a Mad Lads on Lauri Torni, the Finnish mad lad who hated commies so much, he fought for three different countries including Germany in WWII and America in Vietnam. Please Dank I am begging you.
@@gkewley42 if you're American, you may also have heard him referred to as Larry Allen Thorne instead of Lauri Allan Torni because he changed his name when he immigrated.
Can we get a mad lad on John Paul Jones? Another Scottish mad lad who when asked to surrender, reportedly responded with “I HAVE NOT YET BEGUN TO FIGHT” Sixth time asking
Bless ye homes, thanks for all the work and entertainment through the sh*test of times for waaaay more than just a disease. Proper bad times and I love deep dive history and hearing it from my one of my own is and has been... priceless. Glasgow / Paisley raised n now here in sectarian galore Lanark. You’re better than what I ignored in the past, way better and top notch. All the best. Enjoy all these. Take care mucker and keep it up.
My dad spent 3 years in Eastham back in the early 70’s before I was born. He told me some fucked up shit about that place. Including guards pushing inmates to try to escape so they could kill them with impunity
My wife's grandfather was a gas station attendant at the time. Bonnie and Clyde came to his station for a top off and Clyde handed him a $100 bill as a tip. That's a shit ton of money back then.
Actually Clyde preferred his sawed off BAR in 3006 due to its ability to punch through car doors alot better than the 45 auto that the Tommy gun fires. However both are bad ass.
Doesnt RUclips Premium or whatever its called allows you to listen to videos while having your screen turned off? Idk i never used it but thats what they advertise
when you mentioned the Lifer being charged with "more time", first thing i thought of was how funny it would be if prisoners who died before their sentence was up were put in a Coffin and the Coffin was put in a cell for the remainder of the sentence
My girlfriend left me about three weeks before this video after a 2.5 year long, especially happy relationship. I've still got to go strong, and certain things, such as Stoicism have definitely helped. But take it from me. People leave each other too quickly nowadays. If you've got someone who is a good person, cling to them, and I wish you the best.
Roy tried to escape prison to kill Clyde but he and the other men he tried to escape with were snitched on and Roy got a life sentence for his efforts. This information is in the book, the meanest man in Texas
Not sure if he's going to mention it, but a fun fact, Clyde apparently would always steal ford cars whenever he could. In fact, he actually admired their speed and reliability so much, he apparent wrote a letter to Henry Ford saying how good his cars were lol.
@@tarico4436 Slap me with that juicy timestamp my boy. My comment was made before watching the vid, hence why I said, not sure if he's going to mention it. About 20 mins into the vid now.
My great grandmother lived next door to the apartment in Joplin, MO, on Main St. It's still there, along with the bullet holes. There's a walkthrough of it online.
For anyone who doesn't know, the Browning Automatic Rifle isn't anything like an "assault rifle". It is literally an automatic *rifle,* firing a full-power .30-06 round. And depending on which variant you're talking about, it weighs anything between 16 to 24 *pounds.* This is a massive f'ing gun, one that most experienced soldiers found difficult to use as anything other than a light/medium machinegun that you can theoretically fire while standing or advancing. And by "theoretically" I mean "this is an awful idea, why is it so f'ing heavy." Now, remember that Bonnie was 4'10 or 11", and 90lbs. That means, best-case scenario, that f'ing thing weighs 18% of what she does, and is over 3ft long. That's just incredible. Genuinely, truly incredible.
@@laughingsnake1989 Ah. That makes more sense, given they only made like 125 of the Monitors. None the less, it's still a .30-06. Cutting it down might make it more carryable, but lowering the weight like that also increases felt-recoil.
New Mad Lad suggestion; Audie Murphy an undersized 17 year old who lied about his age to enlist in the Marines then Navy then Paratroopers but got turned down joined the Army then not only obtained the rank of First Lieutenant but also became one of the most decorated American soldiers in World War II
Please do one for each of the following: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Witold Pilecki. Edit: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was a WWII vet for the Red Army who after criticizing Stalin and the communist government, in private letters, was sent to the GULAGs for eight years; he served twelve. Solzhenitsyn wrote the books on the subject with, “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich”, and the three-part volume, “The Gulag Archipelago”, (the first book has a foreword, now, by Jordan B. Peterson) with additional context provided in speeches from the U.S. and U.K. turned into the book, “Warning to the West”. Witold Pilecki was a Polish soldier in WWII who, after the Germans invaded in 1939, volunteered to be imprisoned in Auschwitz to gather intelligence on what was going on inside the prison walls. He also broke out and fought in the Warsaw Uprising. He also has the book, “The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond Bravery” by Captain Witold Pilecki.
When they planted the guns at the Eastham Unit they hid the guns in piles of cleared brush and mesquite which had been cut down to clear the fields since Eastham is a farm unit. To this day since that escape, TDCJ policy is that ANY and ALL cleared brush is to be immediately burned the same day at every unit in Texas. I spent 17 months there between 2007-2009. In the 80's, if you can find an archive of the Newseek article, Eastham was the worst prison in the United States. It's no where near that bad today (at least on the north end of the unit where I was).
So hamer wasn't actually originally brought on with a posse. He was kind of just brought on by himself as a state sanctioned bounty Hunter employed by the department of corrections. He had quit the ranger service shortly after Miriam Ferguson was elected governor because they knew that meant Miriam's husband was basically in charge again. The fergusons were one of the most corrupt power couples in Texas history and constant enemies of the Texas rangers mainly because the rangers tried to investigate them for their corruption. Basically he was not employed as a full-time state employee when he went after Bonnie and Clyde. He was a paid State contracted bounty hunter Shortly after he was brought on to the case he investigated one of their more famous killings of Bonnie and Clyde, of two Texas highway patrol motorcycle troops around Christmas time. So basically they had killed two Texas State police officers in addition to all the prison guards prior to that. Their names were patrolman Murphy and patrolman wheeler. Hamer did most of his investigation on his own and when he developed the intel about the methvin family and farm is when he brought on his extra guns and posse. Including basically requisitioning heavy weaponry from national guard armories. Calling what the hamer posse did overkill completely disregards the fact that Bonnie and Clyde were heavily armed and usually mag dumped on their own when in shootouts with the cops. I do see that you kind of mentioned that later. They also survived several recent brushes and were still on the run and you don't take chances with people like that. Coupled with the fact that they had the cover of a vehicle and with how good of a driver Clyde was. And finally the way they had killed those two patrolmen when Hamer had started the case was particularly sadistic involving close range execution after the initial barrage, one witness reporting that they continuously pumped rounds into the dead patrolman's head and laughed as it bounced off the pavement. You could say it was just a bit charged of a situation. The public went crazy over them thinking they were some type of Robin Hood couple when the truth is they very rarely robbed big bad Banks and they mostly took money from people who really couldn't afford it. And like you said they killed a lot of people who probably didn't deserve it. The press really screwed this one up big time and it's kind of gross how people acted like they were good folks.
Blanche didn't get a lighter sentence just because she was a woman - she was the least involved in the gang's activities. She was basically just there.
"Weird" how Clyde gets a bunch of his sentenced suspended when he gets arrested multiple times And then you had people doing very basic shit and getting a 15 year sentence huehue
Just west of Dallas past the Trinity there's a fairly big scrap yard off Interstate 30 where they used to hide out. Used to pass it every time I'd go see my dad.
A wee note - Bonnie and Clyde's car has been moved to Primm Valley Resort, which is nearby Whisky Pete's. It's been moved between the two locations (and other museums) a number of times, it seems. It was certainly in Primm Valley when I was there a week ago!
The car was on loan for an FBI exhibit at the Reagan Presidential Library when I was in the area for winter break. There were a bunch of other mad lads that dankula has covered as well as a lot that I hope he covers in the future.
This was so perfect. I'm a huge fan of the Bonnie and Clyde story, I watch every documentary and movie that I can find...but I have to say Mr. Dankula reigns supreme in telling this story. Absolutely epic.
I've seen quite a few things on B and C over the years. Was hoping the "not see" salute guy could say some new things about 'em, make it worth my time. Yep. This vid very much worth my time.
I woman in my hometown told me a story of how Bonnie came into her shop to get a haircut and the whole time she was cutting her hair Bonnie had her hand inside an umbrella. They also used to hid out in a (Now gone) building in town called "The Sugar Shack" I remember when they destroyed that building, it made me sad.
i'd love a madlads (madlasses in this case) episode on the Night Witches. they're the 588th, all-female soviet night bomber regiment that had to make do with shoddy biplanes, which weren't even designed for combat. and despite that, they've managed to body the german soldiers so damn hard and were so difficult to shoot down, they were said to be "verhext" (german word for bewitched) and thus earned their nickname "die Nachthexen" or "the Night Witches". and most importantly of all, they were given their very own sabaton song which is an absolute banger.
Any non Americans or non gun folks, here’s a fun fact back in Bonny and Clyde’s day you could buy whatever the hell kind of gun you wanted, from fully automatic rifles to whatever the hell else you could find. Ahhh the good old days
Hell ya Bonnie and Clyde hail from my part of Texas, they even robbed a bank in my town. There's a southern tradition of couples raising absolute HELL with each other, sometimes.
My great Uncle Jesse got in their car.🤦♀️ He was hitchhiking, as you did in Texas in the 30s. He recognized them after he was already in the car. Said he thought he was for sure dead. He pretended not to know them, kept his cool and just chatted until he saw a general store and asked to be let out. He called the police using the store phone, but they were long gone by the time anybody got there.
The reason that Fords were so far ahead of most cars of the time was that engine. This wasn’t long after the Model A had replaced the Model T, which had a four-cylinder. It wasn’t a small one like today’s four-bangers (at just under three liters, it displaced about as much as a typical V6 does today), but it still wasn’t huge and made a paltry twenty horsepower. Owing to the Model T’s popularity, everybody else started building similar engines until Chevrolet started offering a much more powerful straight six (the AC International) at a price competitive with the Model A in the 1929. Henry Ford didn’t like sixes for some reason, so they took it a step further by offering a V8 in the new Model B in 1932. Bigger engines had been in American cars before it (like the 1930 Cadillac V-16 and its massive eponymous 7.4L), but they were top-tier, mostly hand-built luxury models. There was no mass-market car like the Model B. Again, most other manufacturers were still aping the T, and here was a car available at a similar price with over three times as much horsepower. It’s not surprising that Barrow found it so useful in evading the law. There were common and could outrun just about everything else on the road.
Go to buyraycon.com/dankula for 15% off your order! Brought to you by Raycon.
I miss my boy...RAID SHADOW LEGENDS🔥
YOURE A MAD LADS
Ill give you a real time mad lad.... im running for congress.
cumquat
Please do James Bowie from Texas
(The creator of the Bowie Knife)
The Texas revolution was alot like an MMORPG you'll come to find out
Bonnie and Clyde taught us one thing:
*When it comes to crime, it's all about marketing.*
And a kevlar vest.
Just ask the US Congress.
For longevity, it's a necessity.
@@karlgoodman9194 US Congress is terrible at marketing. Everyone hates them, but they're hidden behind really big guns.
The real message was; Don't be a manlet
Man, I gotta say, that lifer that took Clyde's blame for killing his rapist is one of the most based things I've ever heard.
lifers are indeed based
@@masterodisguise2983sometimes
@@masterodisguise2983 This is the worst take I've ever heard.
"Never underestimate the stupidity of horny teenagers" is the redacted subtitle of Romeo and Juliet.
Luckily the only people Romeo and Juliet killed were themselves.
If Romeo could only build a Killdozer. He be the Alfa Romeo.
@seraphim Mercutio was always my favourite character in the play, he was a loyal friend but his line "a plague on both your houses" really encapsulates the depth of how he felt betrayed for his service and just how petty the conflict was
Screw Tybolt though, that guy was an ass
@seraphim Wasn't killing Tybalt unconnected to their love? So it wasn't the horny "Them" that got him killed.
They both killed themselves cause they falsely believed the other was dead. Idk about you, but I would have seeked confirmation. I wanna go to the wake and see the body please.
It is funny how Romeo and Juliet are the examples of the idealistic true lovers when they were 14 and 16,
any teenage romance is laughed at and told, "you don't know what love is yet."
A fucked up thing to say. Like in Forest Gump when Jenny told him he didn't know what love was. That he was too stupid too. She acts like a deplorable human being throughout the entirety of the story, not telling him he had a kid.
"Bonnie followed suit by firing an automatic rifle out of the kitchen window".. as fierce as she might be she still knows her place
LOL.
😂 😂
An interesting thing is she was a small person and the BAR (Browning Automatic Rifle) was a big gun designed for large men. The recoil was probably insufferable, I'm surprised that she was able to hit anything.
@@twistedyogert Sometimes people manage to do cool stuff, despite the odds against them.
Not all of them, but this moment is up there considering her stature, it must have been a surprise.
@@twistedyogert clyde was an amateur gunsmith and had cut down Remington 11 shotguns and full auto BARs (Browning Automatic Rifles) in those days Americans could still buy machine guns freely.
"You're not getting rid of me that easily" Perfectly sums up the Scottish attitude towards the English throughout history.
The Irish attitude towards the English throughout history is just an endless string of violent expletives.
Celts: Raids the border regions of England
England: Responds
Celts: "Bloody imperialists"
@@sh-hg4eg reject Modern Britain. Return to the 4 Kingdoms.
We'll come and liberate you from Jimmy Krankie
@@thegatorhator6822 and still going
"But before we get into the crime spree, it is in fact your boy, Ford Motors!"
-Clyde Champion Barrow
"First 100 people who buy a Ford get to help me in my next robbery"
I really think that John Dillinger was the maddest of madlads during that time. He shot his way out of many situations, but he didn't rob ordinary folk, and he was actually good at being a criminal
No, that would be Baby Face Nelson. He killed 3 FBI agents two of them in a gun battle in which he died himself
Was it Dillinger that was notorious for his BAR with the cut down barrel?
@@loger_2floofyboogaloo278 yep
@@CastawayHikes aah cool. u like my pfp?
@@loger_2floofyboogaloo278 no one cares about your pfp dude
When I learned that Frank Hamer was quoted as saying, "we really popped a cap in 'em" in the aftermath of the Bonnie and Clyde ambush I just had to see how far back the phrase went. Turns out it dates back to the mid 1800s, referring to popping or busting a percussion cap while firing a black powder muzzleloader. It was originally an Army term.
the Army 1800's: we bust caps all day long!
studio gangsters in the 90's: bustin caps and dropping chronic plates!
studio gangsters now: mumbles for 10 minutes
Interesting thankyou Man
"Show him his muscles"
purple aki appears
RIP
My favourite film about Bonnie and Clyde is the move The Highwaymen, it treats the two of them more like horror movie monsters, only slowly showing them over time and constantly treating them as malevolent.
It also shows how distasteful serial killer celebrity culture really is
The best way of making a movie about someone awful like that is to look at them from the perspective of someone else who isn't taken in by their shit.
@@Tom_Cruise_Missile I disagree. The best way, I have found, is to follow them as the protagonist...
It's up to the writer whether to glorify or vilify them at the end of the day. The reader/viewer is (hopefully) not taken in by their shit. The problems only arise when they're made out to be 'vigilante' type characters who are really fighting against corruption or have valid reasons for committing their crimes.
Of course, the Highwaymen is still an excellent movie.
Yea, it's kind of similar to The Untouchables in that sense
@@pagatryx5451: Breaking Bad being arguably the most famous example of this type of writing.
Yeah I’m sick of these kind of movies to be honest , the krays have had two movies glamorising them , the were not nice people
You’re an absolute Chad for celebrating Valentine’s Day with this type of carnage. Cheers from the US
Absolute respect
Let’s be honest tho valentines is overrated
For the most part, maybe not the murders and killings they did
According to Urban Dictionary, a chad is a residue of fecal matter; usually situated between arse cheeks after incomplete wiping and can spread to balls. How dare you insult our hero!
A relative of mine claimed to have been picked up by Bonnie once, when hitchhiking, and that she glanced meaningfully at the gun on the seat between them when she asked if he was willing to drive for them. He said no, she hesitated, then pulled over and let him out.
But that relative of mine was a drunken Cajun, and I'm not 100% certain that he was the most reliable narrator.
I can't believe they would do something so heinous as CROSSING STATE LINES. What's this world coming to, jeez.
The Feds disliked that...
Reminds me of Kyle Rittenhouse. Media and the sheep who just repeat what they are told repeated that line over and ober again.
So Clyde was an angry manlet and Bonnie had daddy issues.
Many such cases
Ahead of their time
Clyde was the first "supreme gentleman".
@@valkyrie9646 At least Clyde actually got some.
I heard a rumor that was started in the mid 2000s said that Bonnie was found to be pregnant by the either the mortician or doctor doing her autopsy, but the feds kept it quiet so the public wouldn't be outraged by them killing a pregnant woman.
I didnt know that could happen during an autopsy......shocking.
how the fuck do you get a dead woman pregnant?
@For Redwall 2 wtf dude he was joking lmao
@For Redwall 2 He may well known that it was a joke.
@@allybally0021 This made me laugh more than it should have XD
They murdered innocent people, many were suffering as much as them. The Highwaymen had it right.
Hammer and Gault are the MVPs.
Nah should have let them get one more lol
Frs they deserved an even worse death then they got
I can’t believe the barely hidden admiration Dank has for these cold blooded killers.
@@greyedgamer TBF I think the getting sent to hard time for stealing a chicken and coming out a full-blown psychopath seems to resonate with Dank.
Legend has it that if they got their second booster they would've become immune to bullets and even able to fly away for the shooting.
Truth! They should've vaxxedmaxed
And fauchi would have decended to kill the pasey
I thought RedBull gave people wings?
Interesting thing about the ambush that succeeded in killing Barrow and Parker. I live a couple hours from Gibsland, Louisiana, the town outside of which it happened, and the museum in town is a good authority on these events.
Prentiss Oakley, the Deputy Sheriff of Bienville Parish, was a member of the ambush crew that Ranger Hamer organized upon predicting Barrow and Parker's route. For the ambush, Oakley borrowed a Remington Model 8 in .35 Rem, a semi-auto rifle he had previously borrowed from the local doctor for hunting. From his position, he got a bead on Barrow's left temple as the target vehicle slowed to a near-stop. One to seize the moment, it would seem, Oakley fired and hit Barrow's head before Hamer gave his fire command.
There's sketch info on the whereabouts of the rifle in question after that, a couple of Model 8 owners claiming theirs to be the rifle used by Oakley, and urban legends that it is haunted and would fire if stored with a round in the chamber. The museum, last I visited, was trying to buy the rifle they believe is the one in question, but I can't guess how accurate that is.
BTW, anyone reading this who can travel to Gibsland, I can recommend it. The museum also owns the cafe where Barrow and Parker got breakfast to-go minutes before being ventilated, and you can order the sandwiches they ordered.
I'll drop in next time I go to see family in JDP. Thanks for letting me know it's there!
What’s the sandwich? I wanna try it either way lol
@@brendanfinnegan3615 Barrow ordered a fried baloney sandwich and Parker got a BLT.
@@kingnothing3523 Sounds like they didn't have a bad final meal.
The Netflix movie The highwaymen is a pretty good movie about the former Texas Rangers who tracked down Bonnie and Clyde. It's more of a detective movie then a action movie but it's pretty good.
Love that movie
That movie is pretty great.
I was absolutely terrified of Bonnie and Clyde as a kid. My moms family is from Commerce, Oklahoma. Bonnie and Clyde killed a deputy, may be called constable, and kidnapped a senior cop, in Commerce... Friends of my grandfather. Late 60s we visited and the old folks were talking about the murder as it was out in open and, outside Mickey Mantle, only thing that happened in Commerce. One problem with the discussion they had about the gangsters, they failed to mention they were dead. I was sent to park and I was convinced that Bonnie and Clyde would get me!
My uncle's best friend his entire life was Charles Floyd, son of Pretty Boy Floyd. In that case everything Mr Floyd told us kids about his dad was he was a good guy overall. He didn't scare me. All of my family outside my generation are dead and gone... Time won, again
We have an interesting criminal history in Oklahoma!
"Love is strong, but this gun is stronger!" - Frank Hamer... probably
As someone from Joplin, there were a huge number of bootleggers in town back in the 30s. The out-of-work miners that had previously been the linchpin of the local economy dug a series of speakeasies and smuggler's tunnels to support the mob. They also dug connecting tunnels into the mines that allowed dozens of miles of covert movement. But most moonshiners were arrested without violence, so it really was a surprise that anyone would shoot back.
How he can look at his notes every other second and stare back into your eyes to tell a good story is actually pretty impressive
Never noticed that till you mentioned it , he makes it look like he is just telling a story ,
that other prisoner who took the blame for him killing the man who bummed him is quite honourable tbh
William Marshal
From spare to heir, also known as "The Greatest Knight" never lost a duel or a tourney (The early medieval ones where hundreds of knights would fight a battle, not that 1v1 horse shit), Kicked the teeth in of Richard "The Lionheart" defeating his rebellion in a duel and army on the field, After the Kings death he served Richard and two other kings over his career, defeated a french invasion and reintroduced the Magna Carta.
Good man
William Marshal? Wasn't he a character on In Living Coloreds?
I saw their actual car on display at the outlet mall near Las Vegas many years back. Amazing piece of history... Completely filled with holes.
Bullet holes
except the windows, never understood why they weren't shattered.
@@greenflagracing7067 they absolutely were, it was for display purposes before the big glass case so kids wouldn't get cut up by all the sharp twisted metal leaning over the side to look into it
Dunno why but I feel like these Mad Lads episodes have been getting more and more magically delicious. Anyone else getting that feeling?
No because I’m not a leprechaun
Dost thou wish to live deliciously?
@@hunterkiller1984 nice reference
Like any fine artist, dank is honing his craft very well
This is his best video imo. Part of it is the subject matter, but I love how he told this story
“With the power of love, you can do anything…except stop bullets.” Good to know. Also, it’s pretty cool to see these two get a madlad video. I read about the mob in general from around that time a little while back and their story while detailed was kind of a footnote to the others. So this was cool
You know it's gonna be a good one when the introductory photo of our madlad is a mugshot
I lost it when he said Clyde's ring was destroyed in prison. Good on ya for slipping that in if ya catch my drift lmao
"all they needed was faith and a bit of money"
I understood that reference.
I just need you understand the GODDAMN reference, Arthur!
Have a little goddamn FAITH.
Where is it from?
@@prot07ype87 Red Dead Redemption 2.
WE JUST NEED MOAR MUHNEE!!!!!
There’s a museum down in the south dedicated to Bonnie and Clyde. It was fascinating. But there was also a room showing photos of their dead bodies, and mannequins dressed and fashioned as their corpses. My stomach was in knots. And I then realized the gravity of what kinda place I was in. I was in a place romanticizing their story and their love, but the reality of the death and destruction that followed them was right in front of all of us. On the plus side- the guy working and owning the place was cool as fuck and had a cat who loved pets and visiting with patrons.
I had a great uncle with the Rangers that was at the ambush site right after the shooting stopped. I've been to both of Bonnie and Clyde's gravesites. There is a lot of connections in my family to Texas law enforcement and outlaws. It's great having a family that's split between criminals and cops!
Same bro 😣
After you've been a cop for ~two years, you've been "tested." You either will respect the blue line, and you will lie for a fellow cop, even after watching that cop beat someone senseless or murder someone, or if you won't lie for that fellow cop you will be elbowed out of the profession. So therefore any cop with two + years on the job IS a criminal.
@@tarico4436 ok
Lmao
@@tarico4436 Blah, blah, blah.
In general I'm none too keen on the romanticization of criminals. I get the appeal of outlaws who are viewed as heroes to the common folk, but there's something deeply disturbing about the media sensationalizing certain stories - and Bonnie and Clyde was always the perfect example to me. How a couple of vicious, murderers were sold as a "romeo and juliet of crime" when the reality was that they were screwing around with pretty much everyone in their "posse" kind of kills that narrative. Moreover, they were relatively young, emotionally immature, borderline mentally handicapped and their bodies were practically torn apart by the masses when they were dragged in after the roadside ambush they perished in - that was the sort of frenzy that the media had built up around them. It's just an all-around disturbing story to me.
Now that you mentioned it, "The Romeo and Juliet of crime" fits them quite well, as Romeo and Juliet is constantly called one of the greatest romance stories, when the story is actually about death, family rivalries that were basically gang wars, and stupid teenagers doing stupid shit. It is a tragedy that's been twisted by the media as a love story, when it was anything but. Quite a good description of what happened to Bonnie and Clyde. Definitely gonna use that in the future, thank you for the quote.
It's always been this way, even way back to the days of the Roman Empire and beyond. Not to get too political, but it was like that during the recent George Floyd incident. The man was a criminal who was also a victim of an overzealous police officer, but the version spun by some of the media (and adopted by many people) was that he was some sort of anti-racist hero, which to me felt very surreal.
@@beno1129 hmm, that’s actually a pretty good take, never thought of it that way Ben
I didn’t care for the spin that suggested that the gang weren’t that big a deal until the media made celebrities out of them. Sure they probably didn’t intend to be murderers at first, but when somebody shoots at someone because their target is between them and something they want, I’m not sure if it matters whether they’re cold-blooded killers, hot-blooded, or any temperature in between - they’re ok with murdering somebody and I have a hard time feeling sorry when they die of lead poisoning.
@@myrrhsolace5875 Yeah they got shot up like a piñata, god knows what the townsfolk did when their corpses were dragged out
I am once again asking for a Mad Lads on Lauri Torni, the Finnish mad lad who hated commies so much, he fought for three different countries including Germany in WWII and America in Vietnam. Please Dank I am begging you.
Never heard of him.
@@gkewley42 if you're American, you may also have heard him referred to as Larry Allen Thorne instead of Lauri Allan Torni because he changed his name when he immigrated.
Bump this plz
I love commies
@@JohnSmith-XYZ Based and truthpilled
I loved this episode, still holding out for a 90s norwegian black metal video some day, happy valentines day yall
Can we get a mad lad on John Paul Jones? Another Scottish mad lad who when asked to surrender, reportedly responded with “I HAVE NOT YET BEGUN TO FIGHT” Sixth time asking
He's also amazing at bass too. Great guy.
I agree we need one on him, he pretty much created the American navy through being a pirate
John Paul Jones is a pirate, no loyalty does he possess
Guy sailed a ship to England to take the fight to them
@@Chocoboranger Mon the pirates!!! Torrenting the high seas, watching movies completely free! Yarrrrr!
"sadly his ring was destroyed in prison" took me a few seconds to get that one you sick bastard!
Bless ye homes, thanks for all the work and entertainment through the sh*test of times for waaaay more than just a disease. Proper bad times and I love deep dive history and hearing it from my one of my own is and has been... priceless.
Glasgow / Paisley raised n now here in sectarian galore Lanark.
You’re better than what I ignored in the past, way better and top notch.
All the best.
Enjoy all these.
Take care mucker and keep it up.
Dude....
BIG SHOUT OUT to the homie that took the blame for Clyde's murder!!
What a fuckin bro!!
My dad spent 3 years in Eastham back in the early 70’s before I was born. He told me some fucked up shit about that place. Including guards pushing inmates to try to escape so they could kill them with impunity
Holy shit man
My wife's grandfather was a gas station attendant at the time. Bonnie and Clyde came to his station for a top off and Clyde handed him a $100 bill as a tip. That's a shit ton of money back then.
Actually Clyde preferred his sawed off BAR in 3006 due to its ability to punch through car doors alot better than the 45 auto that the Tommy gun fires. However both are bad ass.
3006?
@@prot07ype87 .30-06
@@prot07ype87 30-06 it's basically a 7.62 with a longer casing and a bigger powder load.
Frank Hamer used the Colt Monitor.
He also loved his "whipit gun". A shortened Browning Auto 5 or Remington Model 11.
‘Unfortunately, Clyde’s ring had been destroyed a couple years prior while he was in prison’. 🤣😂
A perfect Valentine's Day madlads with the most famous of them all.
Bonnie was one down-ass chick and she was down for whatever came their way. I hope with all my being to find a lady that awesome.
Same bro
@@Justpassingby204 You're both pathetic. She was no lady and she got exactly what she deserved.
simp
Ah, Valentine's Day. The one day of the year where my cold, black heart gets a little softer~
18:34 "I have a plan. Just need time and money. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH ARTHUR -er uhh I mean Bonnie!" -Clyde Van der linde
You need to get these put on spotify so I can watch them while driving and not destroy my battery
While I agree, just plug in your tele.
Doesnt RUclips Premium or whatever its called allows you to listen to videos while having your screen turned off? Idk i never used it but thats what they advertise
just download them as mp3s
Had two dogs named Bonnie and Clyde. Bonnie got hit by a car years back and Clyde is now an old grumpy man who only cares about naps.
when you mentioned the Lifer being charged with "more time", first thing i thought of was how funny it would be if prisoners who died before their sentence was up were put in a Coffin and the Coffin was put in a cell for the remainder of the sentence
13:19 You know your series is legendary when you reference one of the very first episodes.
My girlfriend left me about three weeks before this video after a 2.5 year long, especially happy relationship.
I've still got to go strong, and certain things, such as Stoicism have definitely helped.
But take it from me. People leave each other too quickly nowadays. If you've got someone who is a good person, cling to them, and I wish you the best.
Bad feelings are temporary. Keep it up and some sport helps.
I wish you the best.
Wait but you said she left you. Are you calling yourself the good person? Feels like you're leaving out information
Women are never truly happy, whatever happened with her wasn’t your fault
Clyde got so many lucky breaks given to him by the judges and he just kept fucking it up.
Roy tried to escape prison to kill Clyde but he and the other men he tried to escape with were snitched on and Roy got a life sentence for his efforts. This information is in the book, the meanest man in Texas
"No man but the Undertaker will ever get me"
Damn, Clyde was after the streak too huh?
Not sure if he's going to mention it, but a fun fact, Clyde apparently would always steal ford cars whenever he could. In fact, he actually admired their speed and reliability so much, he apparent wrote a letter to Henry Ford saying how good his cars were lol.
Did you not watch the entire vid? I bet you want a timestamp from me, too, eh?
@@tarico4436 Slap me with that juicy timestamp my boy. My comment was made before watching the vid, hence why I said, not sure if he's going to mention it. About 20 mins into the vid now.
46:06
I'm looking forward to a future Canadian Truckers MadLads.
We gotta let em defeat the Mounties first :^)
I feel it’s a running gag for dank to be sick every video these days with the amount of times I’ve heard him say he was
My great grandmother lived next door to the apartment in Joplin, MO, on Main St. It's still there, along with the bullet holes. There's a walkthrough of it online.
For anyone who doesn't know, the Browning Automatic Rifle isn't anything like an "assault rifle". It is literally an automatic *rifle,* firing a full-power .30-06 round. And depending on which variant you're talking about, it weighs anything between 16 to 24 *pounds.* This is a massive f'ing gun, one that most experienced soldiers found difficult to use as anything other than a light/medium machinegun that you can theoretically fire while standing or advancing. And by "theoretically" I mean "this is an awful idea, why is it so f'ing heavy."
Now, remember that Bonnie was 4'10 or 11", and 90lbs. That means, best-case scenario, that f'ing thing weighs 18% of what she does, and is over 3ft long. That's just incredible. Genuinely, truly incredible.
Clyde liked the colt monitor version that was a cut down verison
@@laughingsnake1989 I thought that was the version that the FBI used?
@@RaptorJesus they did but Clyde cut his bar down to the same size useing a hacksaw and removed a bunch of stuff
@@laughingsnake1989 Ah. That makes more sense, given they only made like 125 of the Monitors. None the less, it's still a .30-06. Cutting it down might make it more carryable, but lowering the weight like that also increases felt-recoil.
You can shoot it from the hip on full auto while standing. Shooting it from the shoulder _sucks_ because it's heavy af yet still has punishing recoil.
Clyde's ring was distroyed in prison 😂😂😂 brilliant
His ring became a bracelet 😂😂
@@bazglsgw1208 prolapsed
New Mad Lad suggestion; Audie Murphy an undersized 17 year old who lied about his age to enlist in the Marines then Navy then Paratroopers but got turned down joined the Army then not only obtained the rank of First Lieutenant but also became one of the most decorated American soldiers in World War II
War shit is boring
@@dylanmonstrum1538 opinions vary
Audie Murphy starred as himself in a WW2 movie based on himself.
"To Hell And Back" is the name of the film.
@@jaspermcminnis5538 yeah & it had to be toned down cuz as Audie said "yeah it really happened but no one is gonna believe it."
Wasn't he just given a load of medals that were supposed to be given to deceased men because his real dad was actually a general?
Hubby cooked me dinner AND I get a “Valentines Special” from Dank?!? Love it 🥰
Please do one for each of the following: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Witold Pilecki.
Edit: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was a WWII vet for the Red Army who after criticizing Stalin and the communist government, in private letters, was sent to the GULAGs for eight years; he served twelve. Solzhenitsyn wrote the books on the subject with, “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich”, and the three-part volume, “The Gulag Archipelago”, (the first book has a foreword, now, by Jordan B. Peterson) with additional context provided in speeches from the U.S. and U.K. turned into the book, “Warning to the West”.
Witold Pilecki was a Polish soldier in WWII who, after the Germans invaded in 1939, volunteered to be imprisoned in Auschwitz to gather intelligence on what was going on inside the prison walls. He also broke out and fought in the Warsaw Uprising. He also has the book, “The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond Bravery” by Captain Witold Pilecki.
7:20 so you're telling me, she had fatherless behavior
When they planted the guns at the Eastham Unit they hid the guns in piles of cleared brush and mesquite which had been cut down to clear the fields since Eastham is a farm unit. To this day since that escape, TDCJ policy is that ANY and ALL cleared brush is to be immediately burned the same day at every unit in Texas. I spent 17 months there between 2007-2009. In the 80's, if you can find an archive of the Newseek article, Eastham was the worst prison in the United States. It's no where near that bad today (at least on the north end of the unit where I was).
It was still a shithole when I was there in the 90's.
Hybristophilia must be where the romanticized images of pirates and "gentlemen thieves" come from.
So hamer wasn't actually originally brought on with a posse. He was kind of just brought on by himself as a state sanctioned bounty Hunter employed by the department of corrections. He had quit the ranger service shortly after Miriam Ferguson was elected governor because they knew that meant Miriam's husband was basically in charge again. The fergusons were one of the most corrupt power couples in Texas history and constant enemies of the Texas rangers mainly because the rangers tried to investigate them for their corruption. Basically he was not employed as a full-time state employee when he went after Bonnie and Clyde. He was a paid State contracted bounty hunter
Shortly after he was brought on to the case he investigated one of their more famous killings of Bonnie and Clyde, of two Texas highway patrol motorcycle troops around Christmas time. So basically they had killed two Texas State police officers in addition to all the prison guards prior to that. Their names were patrolman Murphy and patrolman wheeler.
Hamer did most of his investigation on his own and when he developed the intel about the methvin family and farm is when he brought on his extra guns and posse. Including basically requisitioning heavy weaponry from national guard armories.
Calling what the hamer posse did overkill completely disregards the fact that Bonnie and Clyde were heavily armed and usually mag dumped on their own when in shootouts with the cops. I do see that you kind of mentioned that later. They also survived several recent brushes and were still on the run and you don't take chances with people like that. Coupled with the fact that they had the cover of a vehicle and with how good of a driver Clyde was. And finally the way they had killed those two patrolmen when Hamer had started the case was particularly sadistic involving close range execution after the initial barrage, one witness reporting that they continuously pumped rounds into the dead patrolman's head and laughed as it bounced off the pavement. You could say it was just a bit charged of a situation. The public went crazy over them thinking they were some type of Robin Hood couple when the truth is they very rarely robbed big bad Banks and they mostly took money from people who really couldn't afford it. And like you said they killed a lot of people who probably didn't deserve it. The press really screwed this one up big time and it's kind of gross how people acted like they were good folks.
Male criminal: 260 years in prison
Female criminal: 10 years in prison, paroled after 6
🤔
Whaoh dude really makes you think whoaaaahh woweee literal facism reee
@@hypno5690 do you know what facism means?
Blanche didn't get a lighter sentence just because she was a woman - she was the least involved in the gang's activities. She was basically just there.
The “Bonnie & Clyde Death Car” is no longer in Primm. They took it out last year. I think they moved it to the Ronald Reagan Museum in Simi Valley.
As we all know, Ronald Reagan himself gunned down Bonnie and Clyde.
Why's everything in America named after Ronald Reagan?
@@tenacious3911 Because the guy built a cult of personality around himself, despite him not even being the most pro-freedom president
"Weird" how Clyde gets a bunch of his sentenced suspended when he gets arrested multiple times
And then you had people doing very basic shit and getting a 15 year sentence huehue
A lot of those famous gangsters and bank robbers had mob connections, Clyde was probably no different
Just west of Dallas past the Trinity there's a fairly big scrap yard off Interstate 30 where they used to hide out. Used to pass it every time I'd go see my dad.
A wee note - Bonnie and Clyde's car has been moved to Primm Valley Resort, which is nearby Whisky Pete's. It's been moved between the two locations (and other museums) a number of times, it seems. It was certainly in Primm Valley when I was there a week ago!
A cold thats not the coof?!?! blasphemy! lol keep killing it Dank and we will kick our NOT-COOF colds together! ~ :)
Dude...I'm so glad I found your "Mad Lads" channel. I watched your Unabomb video. You are awsome!!👍
Love this episode. I think Frank Hamer can have his own mad lads episode.
He did some crazy shit before Bonnie and Clyde were even born.
I'd love to see a video on Hacksaw Ridge with Desmond Doss
The car was on loan for an FBI exhibit at the Reagan Presidential Library when I was in the area for winter break. There were a bunch of other mad lads that dankula has covered as well as a lot that I hope he covers in the future.
17:35 Teddy Long then came out from a conveniently-placed Titantron and announced the main event.
As a 5’10” man I can confirm that chicks 4’11-5’2 make me feel like a Greek god.
I wouldn't call Clyde's limp permanent. Just a temporary inconvenience....
🥁
This was so perfect. I'm a huge fan of the Bonnie and Clyde story, I watch every documentary and movie that I can find...but I have to say Mr. Dankula reigns supreme in telling this story. Absolutely epic.
59:03 "What really matters on Valentine's Day... The Valentine's Day Massacre". Oh wait, that's a different story 😎
As soon as he said “Bonnie and Clyde” I actually stood up from my seat and shouted “FUCK YES”
I've seen quite a few things on B and C over the years. Was hoping the "not see" salute guy could say some new things about 'em, make it worth my time. Yep. This vid very much worth my time.
You didn’t jump out of your seat when you saw the thumbnail and when you read the title first?? 🤔
@@jerryrocketandthegogogirls3517 Nope, I watched the premier so it didn’t have the title or thumbnail. Sorry you missed it fam.
I woman in my hometown told me a story of how Bonnie came into her shop to get a haircut and the whole time she was cutting her hair Bonnie had her hand inside an umbrella. They also used to hid out in a (Now gone) building in town called "The Sugar Shack" I remember when they destroyed that building, it made me sad.
i'd love a madlads (madlasses in this case) episode on the Night Witches. they're the 588th, all-female soviet night bomber regiment that had to make do with shoddy biplanes, which weren't even designed for combat.
and despite that, they've managed to body the german soldiers so damn hard and were so difficult to shoot down, they were said to be "verhext" (german word for bewitched) and thus earned their nickname "die Nachthexen" or "the Night Witches".
and most importantly of all, they were given their very own sabaton song which is an absolute banger.
From the depths of hell in silence
Cast their spells, explosive violence
Russian nighttime flight perfected
flawless vision, undetected
'Clydes ring was destroyed in prison years earlier !' - How did you keep a straight face 😂.
Its 10:50 am and my will has never been Stronger
Any non Americans or non gun folks, here’s a fun fact back in Bonny and Clyde’s day you could buy whatever the hell kind of gun you wanted, from fully automatic rifles to whatever the hell else you could find. Ahhh the good old days
i may be single and alone today but an hour long dankula video coupled with copious amounts of alcohol ought to make that better.
Nice end line there Danky ol’ boy
Hell ya Bonnie and Clyde hail from my part of Texas, they even robbed a bank in my town. There's a southern tradition of couples raising absolute HELL with each other, sometimes.
18:46 Ya gotta have faith arthur
I could have sworn you'd already covered Bonnie & Clyde....
Yeah......some mandala phenomenon crap going on here
My great Uncle Jesse got in their car.🤦♀️ He was hitchhiking, as you did in Texas in the 30s. He recognized them after he was already in the car. Said he thought he was for sure dead. He pretended not to know them, kept his cool and just chatted until he saw a general store and asked to be let out. He called the police using the store phone, but they were long gone by the time anybody got there.
Still waiting on the following Mad Lads:
Andrew Jackson
William Tecumseh Sherman
Carl Panzram
There were no Georgians after the Sherman March
Fuck that. Where’s Charles Bronson?
The reason that Fords were so far ahead of most cars of the time was that engine. This wasn’t long after the Model A had replaced the Model T, which had a four-cylinder. It wasn’t a small one like today’s four-bangers (at just under three liters, it displaced about as much as a typical V6 does today), but it still wasn’t huge and made a paltry twenty horsepower. Owing to the Model T’s popularity, everybody else started building similar engines until Chevrolet started offering a much more powerful straight six (the AC International) at a price competitive with the Model A in the 1929. Henry Ford didn’t like sixes for some reason, so they took it a step further by offering a V8 in the new Model B in 1932. Bigger engines had been in American cars before it (like the 1930 Cadillac V-16 and its massive eponymous 7.4L), but they were top-tier, mostly hand-built luxury models. There was no mass-market car like the Model B. Again, most other manufacturers were still aping the T, and here was a car available at a similar price with over three times as much horsepower. It’s not surprising that Barrow found it so useful in evading the law. There were common and could outrun just about everything else on the road.
Without Bonnie and Clyde, we wouldn't have gotten that amazingly 90's Woody Harrleson movie.
Natural Born Killers!!!!
My favourite movie! So underrated, it's a masterpiece, it's beautiful, sick and fun!
I can stand a lot in movies but that one was too much for me. Couldn’t finish it and I actually threw it away!
@@eddiebruv the ending is so brilliant, when Robert Downey Jr goes crazy.
If you missed that, you're missing out!