This week's free giveaway is a copy of the super limited edition Harry Potter version of the Brian Brushwood Book Test. Wow your friends by performing the trick with a book they have actually seen before! We are giving away ONE Harry Potter version of the Brian Brushwood Book Test to the lucky winner of our free giveaway at gimme.scamstuff.com (no purchase necessary, giveaway ends 1/28/2021). Congrats to the winner of last week's Outlaws Crimson Uncut Sheet giveaway: Zeerak Rehman (We will contact you via email within the next two weeks)
Kraft pb jars are brown in colour. You can put a small container down into the half full jar. The thickness of the pb will keep the container in place and will keep you from having to paint it. Pb will preserve so you can keep it anywhere without worrying about it spoiling.
You guys need to watch Barry Cooper's videos "How to Never Get Busted Again" and "Never Get Raided". Both can be found here on RUclips, IIRC. He is a former LEO who realized that he'd been busting people for something that was harmless(weed). He gives really, really good details on how drug dogs sniff out your stuff and the (few) ways there are to keep them from finding them.
Also, back in the early-ish days of hacking(but in the days of 386 or better computers) we used to transfer data to a C= 64 and then save that data to cassette tape. We'd then take that tape and put it in an answering machine. Some people bought the answering machines that would let you change your outgoing message via a remote. They'd have the "outgoing message" as the data and if something went sour they'd just call the number they had the machine on and change the message which would erase the data. Others would just put the data where the first or second message would be so that if someone left a message, it'd overwrite the data. Sometimes they had them setup as a form of deadman switch where if you didn't login to a computer or if you flipped a certain light switch, it'd call and do the deed for you. We had a semi-workable idea back in the day for destroying hard drives that current tech has actually made a LOT easier. I'll have to email you the details because I don't want it getting out before its time is due.
Suggestion inspired by a moment in this episode: An episode about "how to launder money" all about actually physically cleaning dollar bills without damaging them, released on April 1.
When I flew back from London in 1991, they were still having the “troubles” in Ireland, I had left my suitcase at the hotel for the day so it had been out of my control since I had packed it. Security at the airport opened everything including opening the toothpaste and smelling it, but they did not empty it completely so I think I still could have used the toothpaste trick.
Taking out one of the cells in a 9volt would lower the voltage since they are in series to get up to 9volts. But someone could definitely confuse it for a near dead battery
Some 9V cells don't have 6x AAAA, but a "Dagobert sandwich" style stack of flat cells w/o individual metal casings. For the USB rechargeable ones based on an LiIon cell and boost converter inside, you could create some space by switching the LiIon cell to a smaller one and still have normal function (lowered run time though).
A buddy and I were living in a house together, and we discovered that the plastic cap that goes over the tap on a keg fits perfectly at the bottom of a red solo cup. And we had solo cups on our porch all the time, just because of old parties and generally being low level slobs. So we hid our key under the cap at the bottom of an old solo cup, and NOBODY ever found it in the 4 years we lived there.
I knew a guy who hid the weed he sold in Sharpie Magnums. It was a great idea since the smell covered the weed smell. But he got caught cause he kept bragging about how smart he is. 10/10 best way to keep things from being found is not to say anything about it.
In every episode of Live PD, the first place they check for drugs on someone’s person (besides the obvious places) is in their shoes. The amount of times they had drugs in their shoes was honestly hilarious
@@thefierypaladin126 Saying "PC"... saying PC is old. Is someone going to get confused they might have meant their supercomputer compared to their personal computer? hahaha. That's what I meant.
Or alternatively... "A fake utility box isn't a bad hiding place. People don't touch things labeled "high voltage." Repair crews leave them alone too. They're not real, so they never need servicing." But yeah. "When you search a spy's room, you don't waste time checking the safe. You have to assume they're as creative as you are. Slicks come in all shapes and sizes. "
Leaving just one cell in a 9v will not work because a AAAA only outputs 1.5v. the reason there are 6 cells in there is because they are connected in series and they add up to 9v.
I could see the marker being useful in a magic routine, having the card appear in the marker they used to sign it or something like that! As for actually hiding stuff, I think the battery and toothpaste are the best!
As a person who's already been using 'Privacy' for over a year now, I'm actually really happy to see it in a sponsored youtube segment. I genuinely feel like im in more control and safety than with just the bank card alone.
You guys should do an episode on stash clothing, there are so many different cool ones and it’s in the same vain as this Rather than writing expired put opened:old date eg 12/03/2019, it very common in pro kitchens and it looks more like you forgot it rather than put back out of date condiments
This all really depends on your threat model. "onto an airplane" busts all of this, as your stuff is going through an x-ray. randomly in the house, there's way better stuff even commercially available like those fake outlets, or inside any number of innocuous household items (ever take a doorknob apart? what kind of maniac is going to take a doorknob apart?)
If you like hiding valuables around, you'll probably like this idea I've had. You can hide your valuables in whatever clever space you want, but I would recommend having a decoy for someone to steal. You have a small safe someone could pick up, a thief would probably grab that and leave. You could also put some things in the safe that would screw the thief over, like a GPS tracker, a USB with a virus on it, whatever you can think of.
Smoke detectors chirp when the battery is dead because they're hooked up to the house mains electric supply. The battery is there as backup for if the power gets shut off. When the house power is on, the battery isn't being used. They go dead naturally over time. Removing the 9V battery or putting a non-working one in will make it chirp unless the power is cut from the alarm as well. Leaving a single cell in the 9V battery wont work because it will only provide 1.5V (1.5V x 4 = 9V the way it is wired inside).
The late Grant Thompson from "The King of Random" actually did a short video on the mayo jar concept a few years back with his "Miracle Safe." It was really clever too: he found a cat food can that fit the mouth of the jar perfectly so he could have a sort of "false top" that had miracle whip in it.
The sneakiest thumb drive I ever had just looked like a frayed USB cable. I bought it because it was silly thinking that everyone would know it was just a neat looking usb stick, but I actually had to stop people from throwing it away multiple times. If one were to design it to be really sneaky, instead of a frayed cable it could be an actual working phone charger, but also a usb stick that needs to be booted into to access the memory Wall outlets are probably decent places to hide things. They're available everywhere and pretty quick and easy to get in to, and theyre extremely permanent and rarely opened. There isn't a ton of space but enough for a roll of bills or something. I wonder if police ransacking a place would smash or open wall outlets Under the floorboards is a classic place to store bodies, just buy a pair of noise cancelling headphones for the beating noise and youre good I like the battery idea, though I would probably try to leave as much of the circuitry in there as possible, to camouflage the memory chip. I guess maybe if youre like a reporter in some country thats sketchy and youve taken photos of some shit that went down you could hide an std card in your battery thats in your camera, and then just have normal things in the camera memory card itself. Is that decent? I dunno, might be better to hide the battery in something else, but what do we even carry these days thats electronic that isn't just our computers? And they might just straight up take or destroy the camera anyway, though the battery might survive. Also square batteries are better than round ones, which tend to be more common in higher tech devices. A 9-volt is nice because theyre cheap and easy to take apart, but what even uses a 9-volt? I guess you could hide something in your smoke-detector, thats similar to hiding things in wall outlets, but hiding things in a house doesn't seem as applicable as sneaking things through some form of security I think you should try to think about some sort of goals when you go through this. Like what are you trying to hide? Who are you trying to hide it from? What are some things you need to be able to accomplish for it to be a success? Are you hiding it in a stationary location or are you using it to transport something? Do you need to be able to hide from airplane scanners? A lot of these seem kind of vaguely about hiding small things in your house, but like, what does stashing money around your house even do? Make the game mechanics of burglarizing your house more fun? lol, this isn't legend of zelda, no one is coming into your house and breaking your pots The non-openable containers meant for hiding things around the house aren't really solutions to any problem. How would you ever use those? You cant store drugs, because theoretically you want to use or sell those. You cant store data, because why the heck would you need to just store data and not access it? I mean i guess if you have like a couple secret files that youre using to blackmail someone you could hide them in multiple places around your house, but thats totally over the top. Way before you get to that point they're finding ways to deal with you directly. And theres little to no reason to hide money in your own house unless you expect it to be broken in to, in which case you probably dont have much money to hide, or you'd just move somewhere better. So yeah, i guess some poor hiding a few hundred dollars is a potential application, but I would argue that that person should probably have that money "hiding" in some company or stock, not in a physical location. What good does money thats just sitting there do them? Containers meant to be kept at home need to be openable. The soup completely fails as a hiding place. It's not getting through an airport, I mean I guess you could carry it around in a bag on like a train but its big and heavy and pointless. The only thing the soup can is good for is providing electromagnetic protection for the data inside it Hiding things flat against surfaces of similar materials is a good way to make them appear less visible to machine scanning
King of Random did the mayonnaise jar a few weeks back. Paint the entire inside and put a sheet of card stock in as a lining so the paint doesn't scratch. Find a small, short, can that fits within the mouth of the jar, but doesn't fall in, and fill it with actual mayo. That way if it's opened, you see actual mayo unless you pull out that smaller can to access the inside compartment.
I would love to see you challenge each other to find 10 hidden objects in a room, the person who finds the most from the other person wins, obviously, the other person would have to prepare the hiding places the best they can. The ultimate easter egg hunt. Or the two guys could hide stuff from Josie.
I knew a contractor that had installed a hidden room. Access was the clever part: open a cabinet in the kitchen, wave a magnet around in the right spot, and the shelves and inside of the cabinet lift up, exposing the portal. Once inside, one could drop the cabinet 'liner' back into place. The only problem was wear/staining: getting into the thing was a tight squeeze, and trim-edges got worn down a bit.
When I was incarcerated I went to visit my brother in another unit. I had to travel and stay at other units before reaching my destination. While staying in a unit overnight, the following day we were in line to go board the bus. Standing there an inmate and myself heard something fall. We spotted a gold ring spinning on the floor. Quickly I pulled my eye glasses off and reached out and hooked the ring, pulled my face cream and stuffed it inside the cream. I managed to travel through several units and their shakedowns before getting to the place I was getting to. I gave it to my brother to trade off for whatever he wanted.
jason doing the turning the paint can trick for the mayo reminded me of those commercials where someone is like "do you hate dusting?" and then they jam the duster into the roof and it breaks.
Better solution for the "Fake" battery: get some button cells, stack them up, and wire back in. While it does cut down the storage space, it would give at least a measurable voltage, close to spec. Enough for a casual examiner to say, "Yeah, that battery's still good." And then your uncle puts it in his clock radio.
Back in the day I owned a few mk3 Ford Capris. Those cars were like one big hiding place. You could pop off the side panels in the boot reasonably quickly and easily get 5 bottles of spirits wrapped in towelling in each side, and another 5 per side behind the quarter panel cards beside the rear bench seat. The fixed rear seat base also came up with a few screws and there was room for 10 or so bricks of 200 cigarettes under there (As long as no one sat in that seat). And my favourite. The steering wheel had an easy to pop out 2" centre trim piece that covered the mounting nut, but the nut was a good 4" below that cap. That was a perfect place to stash your condoms.......... where your girlfriend wouldn't find them. ;)
An unopened jar of mayo can live at room temp for a good long time. So you put the jar up on a high shelf somewhere, and NOBODY will bother with it. Or if you run out of mayo in your fridge and someone's looking for more, you just tell them, "oh nah, that one's been expired for a while, I just haven't gotten around to throwing it away yet." If it's on a high enough shelf almost nobody is going to bother trying to throw it away for you.
I have one that's been tested in real life many years ago during the height of airline security: Lotion bottle with opaque lotion, obviously. Purchase the one with a snap off rather than screw off lid/pump. Remove carefully. You'll need to snap it back on for continued functionality. I put the contraband in plastic for protection (melted cig pack plastic to be specific) and then jammed the packages way down into the lotion. It got thru multiple flight gates and 2 physical inspections. The contraband scent and view remained hidden. These days you have to use really small bottles so it makes it a bit harder for airlines but the idea scales and any bottle can be used at home or regular travel.
You could remove the piece of paper on the inside of the lid of the mayo jar, write a message on the part facing the plastic, and replace it. Or even a little bit of money or a small sd card.
I think writing "expired" or "out of date" on the mayo would actually work. It feels like the old Pizza Delivery Van thing, where no one really stops to say "wait, don't they deliver pizzas with bikes and small cars? Why do they need a whole van to deliver one or two pizzas?" No one will stop to ask why you labeled you mayo as bad and put it back, they'll just say "you need to throw your mayo away, it's gone out of date!" The 9V battery, you'd need to wire up enough button cell batteries to make 9 volts, otherwise your thing you want to work wouldn't work.
roll several bills around the batteries in a flashlight. remove top of foot powder can , take out powder, place baggie of bills in can , refill with foot powder, close can back up. (do same with bag of flour.) take a fresh fish, place contraband inside fish, place in baggie with a bit of water, suck out as much air as possible (without sucking out fish water), freeze, remove from bag, and add to a larger bag of other frozen fish and pop back into freezer
The trick with making slips like these is that it's always a tradeoff between security and accessibility. If you want it to be highly accessible, it won't be secure, but if you want it to be highly secure, it won't be very accessible. That's the slip rule of thumb.
Brian's story reminds me... When I was a kid I had a variety of magazine subscriptions and I would keep dozens of magazines on my bookshelf. One of the magazines one time had some kind of ad that had a little pocket in it. Of course can see where this is heading but no lie. Another kid I rarely hung out with comes over, and we're just chillin in my room. Basically none of the rest of my friends would ever even think to read one of my magazines but this dude did, grabbed the one that had the stupid ad in it, and when he got to the ad, actually reached into the little pocket and pulled out the freaking money. Being a kid, it was only like $10 so not a conspicuous amount of money. I still can't believe it happened. A totally bizarre thing.
For the mayo ... paint the entire inside surface so it looks like a full jar, add stable weight, and carefully glue a safety seal to the top. Hide in the back of the pantry. Still sealed and not a frequency risk, it can be hidden in a logical place, but dismissed as 'old' if questioned about it.
Inside a speaker, drowned in melted candle wax, stuffed in the bottom of a tub of grain/powder/tea leaves, drilling a hole into a door from the top, etc. I love thinking of hidden compartments.
Quite a while ago, a trick I did a couple times was to put a SD card inside a diskette. You lost the functionality of the diskette, but, if you labeled it with something like "Christmas Shareware Games" nobody would ever be truly dismayed if they popped it in a drive and it made a bunch of funny, bad sounds and didn't load. However, that was then, and this is now. I don't have a diskette I'm willing to pop open, but I'd bet good money that a micro SD would fit in one of the upper corners, and not interfere with functionality, nor add a slight bulge like a full size SD card did. Or, now that I'm thinking of places one could fit a micro SD... behind the CD holding portion of a CD case, provided it's one of the opaque variety, would work nicely. A little double-sided tape would prevent it bouncing around. The best food container hidey-hole idea I ever saw, was a Tupperware-style container with another, separate container inside of it. The outside bowl was beat up and scratched, like it was old, and had been used a lot, so it already couldn't be seen that well inside of. Filling the space between the two bowls was spaghetti and chunky tomato sauce, and on top of that, some kind of, epoxy layer, sealing it all away from the lid of the inner bowl. It got nasty looking, but didn't smell. My friend kept it beneath one of the seats in their car. If someone pulled it out, it looked, and felt (sloshing and all) like an old, forgotten spaghetti lunch. No one ever opened it (who didn't already know the secret) because it looked like it'd smell fucking awful. IDK how long one could expect it to last, but it can't have been to expensive to make. It'd definitely last for one good, long, interstate daycation. -cough-
on the can of soup - there are some devices that remove the lid in such a way that there aren't any sharp corners/ridges and that it's "resealable" in a way that is more secure/inconspicuous
Old country legend: some 'illicit distillers' used to sell moonshine in jars they painted to look like other jarred products, jams, jellies, preserves, etc. The revenuers raided the market they were selling their wares at and busted some other moonshiners there, but their jars were painted so well they just looked them over and moved on.
get a glue stick, take the stick of glue out and cut it in half more or less. put the money in the plastic tube and put the glue back in and use it a bit to make it look older. love the vids keep it up.
My spots always involved things most people wouldn't know how to take apart computer, tv, printer (one of my favorites), and even inside of a 2x4 that had a slot cut out that I drilled to the underside of my bed 😆
Truth. How many of those page views are TSA agents and cops, as this show has been added to their required briefings or training materials. Still though, none of those spots come close to some I have dreamed up and of course used. Sorry if i'm gonna give that away on a youtube page, I want the ad revenue for it=D
A 9v battery is 6 1.5v AAAA's in series. For every cell you take out you lower the voltage and make it less likely that the device still works. So it's not likely to be a functional battery, but you can still put it in an alarm clock that also connects to the mains as a backup battery and hope nobody unplugs it.
The problem with hiding stuff in condiments (such as soup or mayo) is that it will get spoiled much more quickly. If a can of soup (which can usually last up to a few years) is spoiled when you open it, it's a giveaway.
One more for you, but for emergencies only: waterproof if necessary, then duct tape to the top of a pickle jar, and then superglue it closed. Bonus perk of frustrating people who want to open the jar.
There are trade offs when hiding things and the two primary ones are security and accessibility. It's it's easy to get it's less secure if it harder to get it's more secure but you're not gonna be collecting it in a hurry.
The Chapstick reminded me that we used to make pop-guns out of empty Chapstick tubes. You can get the screw loose on the bottom so that it comes way out. Then you hit it back in to make the cap shoot off.
Third time watching this episode, the first two times I was half asleep and the changling in the background kept scaring me everytime I was dozing on and off.
I think something being big enough to fit a flash drive gives it a really big boost in score because flash drives especially now days can fit a lot of information and you could even encrypt it to add an extra layer of security
There are sniffer dogs that can sniff out microSD cards, you'd be surprised by what they can find nowadays without needing to ransack the entire house.
have a six-tap with decorative flourish on the top and bottom which is intended to cover the socket, _but_ the original packaging left on it (because it's riveted in for some dumb reason) provides a paper barrier to hide contraband in _either_ the top or bottom, so then once plugged in and fastened to the wall's outlet as provided by its instructions, it would require the unit to be unfastened and removed to check underneath. It's completely socially invisible, because not many would think to check somebody's plugs.
There was a trend for a little while of making pocket survival kits/hiding cash in chapstick tubes. Apparently you're just going to break the bottom most of the time but if you get it off you can put quite a bit in there. My only problem is that I've never kept up with a tube of chapstick long enough to get halfway through one, and I'm not sure it's even possible to maintain ownership of a single tube for more than about 1 month so I've never been able to trust one with a couple hundred dollars lol. But take a flat head screwdriver and pop the part that twists off gently and try not to break the little tabs that hold it in place. Then you can stuff things in there and replace it, then screw the little bit of chapstick back on top.
Unopened mayonnaise can be stored in a pantry (you don’t have to refrigerate it till after you open it), so the mayonnaise jar is still a good one because you can just stick it in the far back of the pantry where things always get forgotten.
One of my good hiding spaces, long ago, was inside a carefully modified VHS cassette - smaller spools allowed for more room at the back of the cassette. Hide the cassette in the recorder, which would play, and people were none the wiser. If you were inclined, you could also use the cassette for trafficking purposes too.
Each cell in a 9-volt battery is 1.5-volt (x6). If you left one cell you would only get 1.5-volt. It would still have power but would not actually work with something that needs 9-volts. For concealment it might appear as a very weak 9-volt so it still passes but would not technically be functional.
This week's free giveaway is a copy of the super limited edition Harry Potter version of the Brian Brushwood Book Test. Wow your friends by performing the trick with a book they have actually seen before!
We are giving away ONE Harry Potter version of the Brian Brushwood Book Test to the lucky winner of our free giveaway at gimme.scamstuff.com (no purchase necessary, giveaway ends 1/28/2021).
Congrats to the winner of last week's Outlaws Crimson Uncut Sheet giveaway: Zeerak Rehman (We will contact you via email within the next two weeks)
You guys need to do the review of the mad magazine article for a video
I really need a crossover with Larry Lawton.
Kraft pb jars are brown in colour. You can put a small container down into the half full jar. The thickness of the pb will keep the container in place and will keep you from having to paint it. Pb will preserve so you can keep it anywhere without worrying about it spoiling.
You guys need to watch Barry Cooper's videos "How to Never Get Busted Again" and "Never Get Raided". Both can be found here on RUclips, IIRC. He is a former LEO who realized that he'd been busting people for something that was harmless(weed). He gives really, really good details on how drug dogs sniff out your stuff and the (few) ways there are to keep them from finding them.
Also, back in the early-ish days of hacking(but in the days of 386 or better computers) we used to transfer data to a C= 64 and then save that data to cassette tape. We'd then take that tape and put it in an answering machine. Some people bought the answering machines that would let you change your outgoing message via a remote. They'd have the "outgoing message" as the data and if something went sour they'd just call the number they had the machine on and change the message which would erase the data. Others would just put the data where the first or second message would be so that if someone left a message, it'd overwrite the data. Sometimes they had them setup as a form of deadman switch where if you didn't login to a computer or if you flipped a certain light switch, it'd call and do the deed for you.
We had a semi-workable idea back in the day for destroying hard drives that current tech has actually made a LOT easier. I'll have to email you the details because I don't want it getting out before its time is due.
Brian: *Eats old expired MRE*
Also Brian: *Gags at the mere scent of Mayonnaise*
Not only the MRE, don't forget the rust water electric ramen! Of which he wolfed down like it was the only meal of the day.
To be fair mayonnaise is disgusting
@@scarygamer1778 Terrible mayonnaise is disgusting, yeah. A decent mayo is tasty though.
Mayo is great. Mayo and mustard specifically are a great combo.
But... it's Mayo! ew!
i hope they go against eachother in a test to see how many things each person can hide and or find in a room. would be a good video.
Agreed.
They have done that before fyi
@@torakvan9193 Which video was that on?
@@FirstNameLastName-tg3rc Brian ransacking a room, they even used a clip in this video
ruclips.net/video/Hyf0SESSJ28/видео.html
"I took the battery out of my Smoke Detector, because the alarm was giving me a headache and making me dizzy"
"That's exactly what anti-vaxxers sound like"
"I took the battery out of my Carbon Monoxide detector, because the alarm was giving me a headache and making me dizzy"
@@downtroddendave860 "I took out the battery out of my Exhausted Gases Detector, because the alarm was giving me a headache and making me dizzy"
every time my burglar alarm goes off it breaks windows and vaporizes my TV and my xbox
I hope bro still alive 😅
Suggestion inspired by a moment in this episode: An episode about "how to launder money" all about actually physically cleaning dollar bills without damaging them, released on April 1.
I like this
genius
Modern rogue doesn’t carry a wallet jut a bunch of junk that secretly holds money. Pickpockets beware.
I read the title as "9 Sneaky Ways to Hide Cornbread" and was immediately confused
Understandable
no you didnt
should have replaced the mayo with yogurt while Brian was gone. then just start eating it when he got back.
Man that woulda been good
Or just eat the mayo...
When brian returns pull that mayonaise out of the microwave
Vanilla pudding works better
I've also heard, use vanilla pudding. I think the worst one, if you can stomach it is just eat the mayo.
You need to talk to any geocacher. They are used to hiding things in plain sight.
if they haven't done one yet, a geacache hunt video might be fun.
That'd be fun
"Squirrels in your house, watching your Nutflix."
When I flew back from London in 1991, they were still having the “troubles” in Ireland, I had left my suitcase at the hotel for the day so it had been out of my control since I had packed it. Security at the airport opened everything including opening the toothpaste and smelling it, but they did not empty it completely so I think I still could have used the toothpaste trick.
Taking out one of the cells in a 9volt would lower the voltage since they are in series to get up to 9volts. But someone could definitely confuse it for a near dead battery
Some 9V cells don't have 6x AAAA, but a "Dagobert sandwich" style stack of flat cells w/o individual metal casings.
For the USB rechargeable ones based on an LiIon cell and boost converter inside, you could create some space by switching the LiIon cell to a smaller one and still have normal function (lowered run time though).
Had same tbought, you might be able to sub six cells wth an in series stack of six watch type batteries.
"Don't go sneaking in another man's soup! Leave my soup alone!" Had me literally spit whiskey out. The timing of it all. 😂😂😂
A buddy and I were living in a house together, and we discovered that the plastic cap that goes over the tap on a keg fits perfectly at the bottom of a red solo cup. And we had solo cups on our porch all the time, just because of old parties and generally being low level slobs. So we hid our key under the cap at the bottom of an old solo cup, and NOBODY ever found it in the 4 years we lived there.
As far as you know.
"Mayonnaise is a Rorschach test." Brian, 2021
I glanced down and read this exactly when he said it lol.
“Is mayonnaise an instrument?”
An instrument of psychology, yes.
@@secondswell holy shit, i did too
The king of random solved the issues with the Mayo several years ago. Using a container on the top to make it look like it is full.
For being a friend of our dearly remembered Grant, he should have known.
I think these would be impressive if we hadnt seen a drug bust where the coke was hidden in fucking pineapples
or put "usb" in a Little baggy. then put baggy in the "condiment" bottle . no need to dump contents
perfect timing for this video considering I just got bonded out of jail
@@youwouldntclickalinkonyout6236 pffffft, this is golden.
even better since many "usb"s come in plastic bags
I knew a guy who hid the weed he sold in Sharpie Magnums. It was a great idea since the smell covered the weed smell. But he got caught cause he kept bragging about how smart he is. 10/10 best way to keep things from being found is not to say anything about it.
Criminals: definitely going to use all of these methods
Police: definitely going to check all of these methods
In every episode of Live PD, the first place they check for drugs on someone’s person (besides the obvious places) is in their shoes. The amount of times they had drugs in their shoes was honestly hilarious
Brian: *Eats chicken rust soup*
Also Brian: gags at mayonnaise
If applicable, the empty space/compartment you get when removing the weights from your pc mouse is a nice hiding spot.
1) "PC" ? That's so 20+ years ago...
2) "weights from your pc mouse" ?! (J/K)
JimmyDB -
“PC is so 20+ years ago”
What the fuck are you talking about?!
@@thefierypaladin126 Thaaaank you. Because I don't know either.
@@thefierypaladin126 Saying "PC"... saying PC is old. Is someone going to get confused they might have meant their supercomputer compared to their personal computer? hahaha. That's what I meant.
@@downtroddendave860 Well fuck me and all the many tech youtube channels that refer to PC...
Modern rogue drinking game: take a shot everytime they say "it's fine." Guaranteed double shot.
So you have chosen death
Eeeh its fine i can take it
My liver is giving up by simply reading this comment
This man would eat 50 year old junk food but mayonnaise nope 😂
or pickles
To be fair, very old food is so much more interesting than mayonnaise
then shall i tell you about a story, that'll make you disgusted when you hear mayo?
it involves maggots and a hospital visit.
@@higoten1993
Hell yeah!
Modern Rogue Only Fans name: The Modern Rouge
The Moulin Rogue
I don't even wanna think about what would be on it
exclusive ping pong paddle sexual assault
"I guess it's mayonnaise, but it looks like used motor oil."
Yes, I'd take that with me, it might come handy if I had to slide a heavy object around.
Anyone wanna quote Burn Notice about “slicks”? They’re easy to access and offer reasonable security
Or alternatively... "A fake utility box isn't a bad hiding place. People don't touch things labeled "high voltage." Repair crews leave them alone too. They're not real, so they never need servicing."
But yeah. "When you search a spy's room, you don't waste time checking the safe. You have to assume they're as creative as you are. Slicks come in all shapes and sizes. "
The Floridian Brickfilmer Spot on! Big gold star for you!
I haven't thought about burn notice in years. I gotta re watch it
I can just imagine going to a friends house, fixing a bologna sandwich and getting a spoonful of cocaine or something out of the mayonnaise jar
Brian’s little “ahe ahe ahe” laugh is so cute
Leaving just one cell in a 9v will not work because a AAAA only outputs 1.5v. the reason there are 6 cells in there is because they are connected in series and they add up to 9v.
Yeah I may have screamed internally a few times.
LMAO there no AAAA batteries inside of a 9 volt battery come on dude.
@@SomeReefer Have you never opened a 9v? There's 6 AAAAs in there, connected in series. They even mentioned it in the video!
Brian: eats the nastiest 25+ year old MRE food
Also Brian: hates mayonnaise so much it nearly makes him puke
MRE's were specifically designed to last for several decades... so 25 year old MRE's are nothing...
So excited to finally be able to catch a premier from you guys! Love the content
Every modern rogue video I watch gets me on a new watchlist
I could see the marker being useful in a magic routine, having the card appear in the marker they used to sign it or something like that! As for actually hiding stuff, I think the battery and toothpaste are the best!
When you're so early the video isn't even up yet
As a person who's already been using 'Privacy' for over a year now, I'm actually really happy to see it in a sponsored youtube segment. I genuinely feel like im in more control and safety than with just the bank card alone.
You guys should do an episode on stash clothing, there are so many different cool ones and it’s in the same vain as this
Rather than writing expired put opened:old date eg 12/03/2019, it very common in pro kitchens and it looks more like you forgot it rather than put back out of date condiments
This all really depends on your threat model.
"onto an airplane" busts all of this, as your stuff is going through an x-ray.
randomly in the house, there's way better stuff even commercially available like those fake outlets, or inside any number of innocuous household items (ever take a doorknob apart? what kind of maniac is going to take a doorknob apart?)
Thanks for what you guys are doing!
If you like hiding valuables around, you'll probably like this idea I've had. You can hide your valuables in whatever clever space you want, but I would recommend having a decoy for someone to steal. You have a small safe someone could pick up, a thief would probably grab that and leave. You could also put some things in the safe that would screw the thief over, like a GPS tracker, a USB with a virus on it, whatever you can think of.
Smoke detectors chirp when the battery is dead because they're hooked up to the house mains electric supply. The battery is there as backup for if the power gets shut off. When the house power is on, the battery isn't being used. They go dead naturally over time. Removing the 9V battery or putting a non-working one in will make it chirp unless the power is cut from the alarm as well.
Leaving a single cell in the 9V battery wont work because it will only provide 1.5V (1.5V x 4 = 9V the way it is wired inside).
Had to run through the comments before I mentioned the same thing. He was asking for it with that AAAA comment lol
Some smoke detectors are purely battery powered and they still chirp when the battery gets too low
Never give a squirrel your house keys! I learned that the hard way
The late Grant Thompson from "The King of Random" actually did a short video on the mayo jar concept a few years back with his "Miracle Safe." It was really clever too: he found a cat food can that fit the mouth of the jar perfectly so he could have a sort of "false top" that had miracle whip in it.
Did someone relapse?
The ridges on the soup can are a give away?!?! What about the nasty rotting soup?
I feel like the easier alternative to the soup can is the paint can. Who doesn’t have a couple odd cans of paint in the garage?
The sneakiest thumb drive I ever had just looked like a frayed USB cable. I bought it because it was silly thinking that everyone would know it was just a neat looking usb stick, but I actually had to stop people from throwing it away multiple times. If one were to design it to be really sneaky, instead of a frayed cable it could be an actual working phone charger, but also a usb stick that needs to be booted into to access the memory
Wall outlets are probably decent places to hide things. They're available everywhere and pretty quick and easy to get in to, and theyre extremely permanent and rarely opened. There isn't a ton of space but enough for a roll of bills or something. I wonder if police ransacking a place would smash or open wall outlets
Under the floorboards is a classic place to store bodies, just buy a pair of noise cancelling headphones for the beating noise and youre good
I like the battery idea, though I would probably try to leave as much of the circuitry in there as possible, to camouflage the memory chip. I guess maybe if youre like a reporter in some country thats sketchy and youve taken photos of some shit that went down you could hide an std card in your battery thats in your camera, and then just have normal things in the camera memory card itself. Is that decent? I dunno, might be better to hide the battery in something else, but what do we even carry these days thats electronic that isn't just our computers? And they might just straight up take or destroy the camera anyway, though the battery might survive. Also square batteries are better than round ones, which tend to be more common in higher tech devices. A 9-volt is nice because theyre cheap and easy to take apart, but what even uses a 9-volt? I guess you could hide something in your smoke-detector, thats similar to hiding things in wall outlets, but hiding things in a house doesn't seem as applicable as sneaking things through some form of security
I think you should try to think about some sort of goals when you go through this. Like what are you trying to hide? Who are you trying to hide it from? What are some things you need to be able to accomplish for it to be a success? Are you hiding it in a stationary location or are you using it to transport something? Do you need to be able to hide from airplane scanners? A lot of these seem kind of vaguely about hiding small things in your house, but like, what does stashing money around your house even do? Make the game mechanics of burglarizing your house more fun? lol, this isn't legend of zelda, no one is coming into your house and breaking your pots
The non-openable containers meant for hiding things around the house aren't really solutions to any problem. How would you ever use those? You cant store drugs, because theoretically you want to use or sell those. You cant store data, because why the heck would you need to just store data and not access it? I mean i guess if you have like a couple secret files that youre using to blackmail someone you could hide them in multiple places around your house, but thats totally over the top. Way before you get to that point they're finding ways to deal with you directly. And theres little to no reason to hide money in your own house unless you expect it to be broken in to, in which case you probably dont have much money to hide, or you'd just move somewhere better. So yeah, i guess some poor hiding a few hundred dollars is a potential application, but I would argue that that person should probably have that money "hiding" in some company or stock, not in a physical location. What good does money thats just sitting there do them? Containers meant to be kept at home need to be openable. The soup completely fails as a hiding place. It's not getting through an airport, I mean I guess you could carry it around in a bag on like a train but its big and heavy and pointless. The only thing the soup can is good for is providing electromagnetic protection for the data inside it
Hiding things flat against surfaces of similar materials is a good way to make them appear less visible to machine scanning
I just stuff a 6$ whole roasted chicken to hide "stuff" lol
Jason needs to start his own RUclips channel where he just talks about his life and childhood.
King of Random did the mayonnaise jar a few weeks back. Paint the entire inside and put a sheet of card stock in as a lining so the paint doesn't scratch. Find a small, short, can that fits within the mouth of the jar, but doesn't fall in, and fill it with actual mayo. That way if it's opened, you see actual mayo unless you pull out that smaller can to access the inside compartment.
Love your content guys! Been a fan for a good few years now. Cant wait to see what shenanigans you get up to 😂👍
Some kids in my school actually smuggled alcohol on to a feldtrip by hiding it in cans which they sealed using an actual machine made to seal cans.
A pringles tube can fit a standard can of chew or two below the chips. 🤫 some kids got away with that one on a trip.
15:47 - The best part is, you can claim "This is just soup! For my family!"
I would love to see you challenge each other to find 10 hidden objects in a room, the person who finds the most from the other person wins, obviously, the other person would have to prepare the hiding places the best they can. The ultimate easter egg hunt. Or the two guys could hide stuff from Josie.
I knew a contractor that had installed a hidden room.
Access was the clever part: open a cabinet in the kitchen, wave a magnet around in the right spot, and the shelves and inside of the cabinet lift up, exposing the portal.
Once inside, one could drop the cabinet 'liner' back into place.
The only problem was wear/staining: getting into the thing was a tight squeeze, and trim-edges got worn down a bit.
When I was incarcerated I went to visit my brother in another unit. I had to travel and stay at other units before reaching my destination. While staying in a unit overnight, the following day we were in line to go board the bus. Standing there an inmate and myself heard something fall. We spotted a gold ring spinning on the floor. Quickly I pulled my eye glasses off and reached out and hooked the ring, pulled my face cream and stuffed it inside the cream. I managed to travel through several units and their shakedowns before getting to the place I was getting to. I gave it to my brother to trade off for whatever he wanted.
The first place I hid money before I had a bank about was in my high school diploma, cause I knew diplomas were worthless.
jason doing the turning the paint can trick for the mayo reminded me of those commercials where someone is like "do you hate dusting?" and then they jam the duster into the roof and it breaks.
Might be my favourite RUclips channel.
Enough said.
Yes
Better solution for the "Fake" battery: get some button cells, stack them up, and wire back in. While it does cut down the storage space, it would give at least a measurable voltage, close to spec. Enough for a casual examiner to say, "Yeah, that battery's still good."
And then your uncle puts it in his clock radio.
Teens hiding alcohol from parents: *write that down, write that down!*
I work in a prison. You'd be amazed at how ingenious they can get
Back in the day I owned a few mk3 Ford Capris. Those cars were like one big hiding place. You could pop off the side panels in the boot reasonably quickly and easily get 5 bottles of spirits wrapped in towelling in each side, and another 5 per side behind the quarter panel cards beside the rear bench seat. The fixed rear seat base also came up with a few screws and there was room for 10 or so bricks of 200 cigarettes under there (As long as no one sat in that seat).
And my favourite. The steering wheel had an easy to pop out 2" centre trim piece that covered the mounting nut, but the nut was a good 4" below that cap. That was a perfect place to stash your condoms.......... where your girlfriend wouldn't find them. ;)
"Yo! You got them nuts?"
Actually I'm drunk and laughing my ass of. Don't know why 🤣🤣
Brian Brushwood will eat rations from WWII, but gags at the smell of mayonnaise.
An unopened jar of mayo can live at room temp for a good long time. So you put the jar up on a high shelf somewhere, and NOBODY will bother with it. Or if you run out of mayo in your fridge and someone's looking for more, you just tell them, "oh nah, that one's been expired for a while, I just haven't gotten around to throwing it away yet." If it's on a high enough shelf almost nobody is going to bother trying to throw it away for you.
I have one that's been tested in real life many years ago during the height of airline security: Lotion bottle with opaque lotion, obviously. Purchase the one with a snap off rather than screw off lid/pump. Remove carefully. You'll need to snap it back on for continued functionality. I put the contraband in plastic for protection (melted cig pack plastic to be specific) and then jammed the packages way down into the lotion. It got thru multiple flight gates and 2 physical inspections. The contraband scent and view remained hidden. These days you have to use really small bottles so it makes it a bit harder for airlines but the idea scales and any bottle can be used at home or regular travel.
You could remove the piece of paper on the inside of the lid of the mayo jar, write a message on the part facing the plastic, and replace it. Or even a little bit of money or a small sd card.
Brian's idea of the construction of a typical 9v is bewildering.
pretty sure it was close, no? www.quora.com/What-is-a-battery-How-will-you-make-a-battery-of-9V-if-you-have-cells-of-1-5V-each
@@ModernRogue taking out any of the cells would drop the voltage of the battery making it unable to run a 9v device. My biggest qualm at least.
I think writing "expired" or "out of date" on the mayo would actually work. It feels like the old Pizza Delivery Van thing, where no one really stops to say "wait, don't they deliver pizzas with bikes and small cars? Why do they need a whole van to deliver one or two pizzas?" No one will stop to ask why you labeled you mayo as bad and put it back, they'll just say "you need to throw your mayo away, it's gone out of date!"
The 9V battery, you'd need to wire up enough button cell batteries to make 9 volts, otherwise your thing you want to work wouldn't work.
Here's an idea for the 9 volt batter.
You could put the money on the inside of the shell and still have it work.
Nobody could possibly tell.
roll several bills around the batteries in a flashlight. remove top of foot powder can , take out powder, place baggie of bills in can , refill with foot powder, close can back up. (do same with bag of flour.) take a fresh fish, place contraband inside fish, place in baggie with a bit of water, suck out as much air as possible (without sucking out fish water), freeze, remove from bag, and add to a larger bag of other frozen fish and pop back into freezer
The trick with making slips like these is that it's always a tradeoff between security and accessibility. If you want it to be highly accessible, it won't be secure, but if you want it to be highly secure, it won't be very accessible. That's the slip rule of thumb.
Brian's story reminds me...
When I was a kid I had a variety of magazine subscriptions and I would keep dozens of magazines on my bookshelf.
One of the magazines one time had some kind of ad that had a little pocket in it. Of course can see where this is heading but no lie.
Another kid I rarely hung out with comes over, and we're just chillin in my room. Basically none of the rest of my friends would ever even think to read one of my magazines but this dude did, grabbed the one that had the stupid ad in it, and when he got to the ad, actually reached into the little pocket and pulled out the freaking money.
Being a kid, it was only like $10 so not a conspicuous amount of money. I still can't believe it happened. A totally bizarre thing.
For the mayo ... paint the entire inside surface so it looks like a full jar, add stable weight, and carefully glue a safety seal to the top. Hide in the back of the pantry. Still sealed and not a frequency risk, it can be hidden in a logical place, but dismissed as 'old' if questioned about it.
Finally an actual useful video I've been looking to see how to hide contraband for a while
Inside a speaker, drowned in melted candle wax, stuffed in the bottom of a tub of grain/powder/tea leaves, drilling a hole into a door from the top, etc.
I love thinking of hidden compartments.
Quite a while ago, a trick I did a couple times was to put a SD card inside a diskette. You lost the functionality of the diskette, but, if you labeled it with something like "Christmas Shareware Games" nobody would ever be truly dismayed if they popped it in a drive and it made a bunch of funny, bad sounds and didn't load.
However, that was then, and this is now.
I don't have a diskette I'm willing to pop open, but I'd bet good money that a micro SD would fit in one of the upper corners, and not interfere with functionality, nor add a slight bulge like a full size SD card did.
Or, now that I'm thinking of places one could fit a micro SD... behind the CD holding portion of a CD case, provided it's one of the opaque variety, would work nicely. A little double-sided tape would prevent it bouncing around.
The best food container hidey-hole idea I ever saw, was a Tupperware-style container with another, separate container inside of it. The outside bowl was beat up and scratched, like it was old, and had been used a lot, so it already couldn't be seen that well inside of. Filling the space between the two bowls was spaghetti and chunky tomato sauce, and on top of that, some kind of, epoxy layer, sealing it all away from the lid of the inner bowl. It got nasty looking, but didn't smell. My friend kept it beneath one of the seats in their car. If someone pulled it out, it looked, and felt (sloshing and all) like an old, forgotten spaghetti lunch. No one ever opened it (who didn't already know the secret) because it looked like it'd smell fucking awful. IDK how long one could expect it to last, but it can't have been to expensive to make. It'd definitely last for one good, long, interstate daycation. -cough-
The two of you are what we used to call a think tank. Gather up a few dozen more like-thinkers, and you are a force.
on the can of soup - there are some devices that remove the lid in such a way that there aren't any sharp corners/ridges and that it's "resealable" in a way that is more secure/inconspicuous
Old country legend: some 'illicit distillers' used to sell moonshine in jars they painted to look like other jarred products, jams, jellies, preserves, etc. The revenuers raided the market they were selling their wares at and busted some other moonshiners there, but their jars were painted so well they just looked them over and moved on.
get a glue stick, take the stick of glue out and cut it in half more or less. put the money in the plastic tube and put the glue back in and use it a bit to make it look older. love the vids keep it up.
My spots always involved things most people wouldn't know how to take apart computer, tv, printer (one of my favorites), and even inside of a 2x4 that had a slot cut out that I drilled to the underside of my bed 😆
I love how they're going at it, destroying every sigle hiding spot somebody could youse to hide anything...
Great job guys👍👍👏👏
Truth. How many of those page views are TSA agents and cops, as this show has been added to their required briefings or training materials. Still though, none of those spots come close to some I have dreamed up and of course used. Sorry if i'm gonna give that away on a youtube page, I want the ad revenue for it=D
A 9v battery is 6 1.5v AAAA's in series. For every cell you take out you lower the voltage and make it less likely that the device still works. So it's not likely to be a functional battery, but you can still put it in an alarm clock that also connects to the mains as a backup battery and hope nobody unplugs it.
The problem with hiding stuff in condiments (such as soup or mayo) is that it will get spoiled much more quickly. If a can of soup (which can usually last up to a few years) is spoiled when you open it, it's a giveaway.
Bryan’s old school Casio watch.. Clearly a man of culture!
One more for you, but for emergencies only: waterproof if necessary, then duct tape to the top of a pickle jar, and then superglue it closed. Bonus perk of frustrating people who want to open the jar.
Superglued pickle jar? Isn't that every pickle jar?
@@zaxtonhong3958 That's to make the jar seem untampered with after you're done
There are trade offs when hiding things and the two primary ones are security and accessibility. It's it's easy to get it's less secure if it harder to get it's more secure but you're not gonna be collecting it in a hurry.
The Chapstick reminded me that we used to make pop-guns out of empty Chapstick tubes. You can get the screw loose on the bottom so that it comes way out. Then you hit it back in to make the cap shoot off.
Third time watching this episode, the first two times I was half asleep and the changling in the background kept scaring me everytime I was dozing on and off.
I think something being big enough to fit a flash drive gives it a really big boost in score because flash drives especially now days can fit a lot of information and you could even encrypt it to add an extra layer of security
There are sniffer dogs that can sniff out microSD cards, you'd be surprised by what they can find nowadays without needing to ransack the entire house.
have a six-tap with decorative flourish on the top and bottom which is intended to cover the socket, _but_ the original packaging left on it (because it's riveted in for some dumb reason) provides a paper barrier to hide contraband in _either_ the top or bottom, so then once plugged in and fastened to the wall's outlet as provided by its instructions, it would require the unit to be unfastened and removed to check underneath. It's completely socially invisible, because not many would think to check somebody's plugs.
2:35 I don't know what you are talking about, but YES DO AN EPISODE !!! it sounds so promising.
There was a trend for a little while of making pocket survival kits/hiding cash in chapstick tubes. Apparently you're just going to break the bottom most of the time but if you get it off you can put quite a bit in there.
My only problem is that I've never kept up with a tube of chapstick long enough to get halfway through one, and I'm not sure it's even possible to maintain ownership of a single tube for more than about 1 month so I've never been able to trust one with a couple hundred dollars lol.
But take a flat head screwdriver and pop the part that twists off gently and try not to break the little tabs that hold it in place. Then you can stuff things in there and replace it, then screw the little bit of chapstick back on top.
Unopened mayonnaise can be stored in a pantry (you don’t have to refrigerate it till after you open it), so the mayonnaise jar is still a good one because you can just stick it in the far back of the pantry where things always get forgotten.
One of my good hiding spaces, long ago, was inside a carefully modified VHS cassette - smaller spools allowed for more room at the back of the cassette. Hide the cassette in the recorder, which would play, and people were none the wiser. If you were inclined, you could also use the cassette for trafficking purposes too.
Be careful with those batteries! Disconnect each wire seperately and stop them from shorting XD
Each cell in a 9-volt battery is 1.5-volt (x6). If you left one cell you would only get 1.5-volt. It would still have power but would not actually work with something that needs 9-volts. For concealment it might appear as a very weak 9-volt so it still passes but would not technically be functional.