Nephilim Death Squad
Episode: Crack Conspiracies w/ Crack Amico
Release: September 25, 2025
Hosts: Top Lobsta (TopLobsta Productions), Raven (David Lee Corbo)
Guest: Crack Amico
Episode Overview
This lively episode features hosts Top Lobsta and Raven in conversation with Crack Amico, an emerging comedic rapper known for his brash style and deep dives into culture and conspiracy. The episode explores the intersection of comedy, rap, and conspiratorial thought, viewed through both cultural critique and a Biblical-spiritual lens. Topics range from viral diss tracks and industry hypocrisy to the nature of evil, media manipulation, and supernatural phenomena.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Who Is Crack Amico?
- [07:09] Crack Amico shares his origin story, beginning as the winner of a parody rap contest inspired by the "Real Ass Podcast." He details how an inside joke became his stage name and rapid rise in comedy-rap, especially with viral diss tracks of popular comedians.
- “We have the name Krakamiko...It’s got to be like, an unnamed rapper. It’s going to be based on, like, Zak Amico. We need, like a wigger, like, Soundcloud rapper. His name’s gonna be Crack Amico.” – Crack Amico [08:01]
- His first big break was the “LA is Gay” track, a comedic and sharp critique of LA comedians with ties to the Rogan sphere.
2. Comedy, Call-Out Culture, and Industry Hypocrisy
- Crack Amico reflects on holding comedians accountable through humor, discussing the uniquely cathartic role of the “diss track” in modern comedy and podcast culture.
- He reveals some behind-the-scenes friction with Bert Kreischer and how self-mythologizing and narrative control shapes public perception ([10:30-12:56]):
- “He said at Skank Fest that he saw me and I ran away from him, which definitely did not happen.” – Crack Amico [11:50]
- The group critiques the transformation of figures like Dave Portnoy, who, once known for edgy taboo jokes, reversed into outrage culture, especially around issues touching on Jews and free speech.
3. Malice, Outrage, and Social Schisms
- The hosts dissect the cultural aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s assassination and broader social reactions to tragedy:
- “It brings like, elation, like joy, high level glee.” – Raven [13:00]
- Discussion centers around the rapid, often manipulative outrage cycles and the catalyzing impact of graphic viral content and how it shapes empathy, joking, and public discourse.
- [20:22] Crack Amico highlights how empathy isn’t a political posture:
- “It could have been Farrakhan. It could have been a guy that I know would have probably thought that the earth was better without me around. And I still would have been like, God damn, man.”
4. Comedy, Christianity, and Telling the Truth
- The panel explores the role of comedians as truth-tellers, with Crack sharing his own faith journey:
- “I'm a Christian, undecided on denomination...I do consider myself to believe in God.” – Crack Amico [22:15]
- They discuss the tension between being edgy/funny and living according to faith or higher purpose.
- Crack talks about the importance of poking at hard truths while remaining authentic ([25:48-30:27]):
- “I think the glaring skill, the glaring talent that I’ve been given in my life is the ability to not only make music and rap...but also be able to do that and make it funny or put the truth in it or both.” – Crack Amico [29:19]
5. Media Cycles and Conspiracy Mindset
- The conversation critiques media-induced outrage and desensitization, from the “MK Ultra cycle” to engineered social division ([33:46-38:10]).
- The group takes a tongue-in-cheek “conspiracy quiz” with Crack, exploring popular theories—moon landing, flat earth, aliens, simulation theory—often landing on open skepticism, “agnosticism,” or outright disbelief ([38:44-42:08]).
- “Moon landing—I 100% think was not real.” – Crack Amico [41:21]
- On aliens: “I think they're out there...don’t know if we've come in contact with them lately.” [41:38]
6. Social Engineering & Narrative Control on X/Twitter
- The hosts explore whether coverage of racial and political violence is shaped to exacerbate social strife, pointing to deliberate selection and timing of viral content as potentially engineered ([59:45-64:29]).
- “It gets you thinking, like, are they teasing this to us and then giving it to us?” – Crack Amico [61:21]
- Elon Musk’s influence is discussed, including his possible role in stoking civil unrest by “putting a finger on the scale” at key moments.
7. Epstein, Elites, and Spiritual Conspiracies
- [66:16-68:58] Crack Amico shares how the Epstein case animated his own interest in conspiracies:
- “This is the biggest miscarriage of justice I've ever seen. This is the sloppiest. This is the most. This is the biggest scandal that I’ve ever seen in my life.” – Crack Amico [67:28]
- The show pivots to broader conspiracies implicating secret societies, occult rituals, and the supernatural—skull and bones, Moloch temples, the consistent undercurrent of the satanic in elite scandals.
8. Industry Ritual, Soul-Selling, and the Nature of Fame
- Hip-hop is critiqued for image-over-talent and the prevalence of dark rumors—rappers allegedly “selling souls” or engaging in ritual humiliation ([75:34-91:09]).
- Crack Amico wryly laments that no elite offers have yet reached him:
- “Would you like to suck my dick for a million dollars? Now, of course, I say no, because I’m not gay. But it’s the thought that counts, right?” – Crack Amico [77:08]
- Jay-Z, Eminem, and the potential for intentional symbolism in rap are discussed, with Eminem being lauded as an inspiration for comedic but serious hip-hop.
9. Existence of Bigfoot (& Other Cryptids)
- The discussion gets irreverently wild regarding Bigfoot, Yeti, swamp apes, and their possible spiritual or interdimensional natures ([101:05-104:46]):
- “It is also telepathic. And to top it all off, it might be biblical.” – Co-host [103:22]
- Crack’s response: “It’s almost a little overwhelming to try and process in an instant, you know?” [104:37]
10. Creativity, Agency, and the Nature of Thought
- In a meta-moment, Top Lobsta asks how many of Crack’s thoughts are truly his:
- “When I'm writing ... it does feel like you're putting out, like, an antenna...All the ideas that are out here in the ether, wherever they're coming from, whatever realm, whatever dimension, I'm putting out my antenna.” – Crack Amico [108:08]
- The panel reflects on channeling, voice-hearing, and the porousness of consciousness—blurring the lines of individuality and influence.
11. Fun, Pressure, and Refusing to Quit
- Raven and Top Lobsta encourage Crack about the value of persistence, resourcefulness, and enjoying the crazy ride of creative internet work.
- Crack, candid:
- “I'm having the most fun that I've had since I was a kid doing the shit that I'm doing...Every day I feel happy, and every day I feel sad. But it's an experience and I'm very happy to be living it.” [106:08]
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
- “I was at Peco with my kids the other day, saw the gerbils...I thought of it. I was like, what if I put this in my ass?” – Top Lobsta [73:43]
- On Comedy’s Duty: “The comedian's job is to tell the truth, but to make it funny.” – Top Lobsta [25:48]
- Conspiracy Landscape: “At the end of all conspiracies is spirituality.” – Co-host [71:31]
- Meta Clarity: “Are things going to be okay? What's going to happen a month from now? But...never stop being retarded, keep going forward.” – Top Lobsta [112:03]
Timestamps for Key Segments
| Time | Segment or Topic | |------------|----------------------------------------------------------| | 07:09 | Crack Amico’s origin story: Real Ass Podcast, name, rise | | 10:30 | Bert Kreischer fallout, comedy accountability | | 14:20 | Charlie Kirk outrage, malice in public discourse | | 22:15 | Crack’s Christianity, faith journey | | 29:19 | Humor as truth-telling, cultural courage | | 33:59 | News/media as a trauma-inducing feedback loop | | 38:44 | Conspiracy quiz: 33, flat earth, simulation theory | | 41:21 | Moon landing, aliens—skeptic takes | | 59:45 | Engineered civil strife, media cherry-picking | | 66:16 | Epstein, elites, spiritual evil | | 75:34 | Hip-hop, ritual/selling soul, industry critique | | 101:05 | Bigfoot, cryptids, and supernatural speculation | | 108:08 | “How many of your thoughts are your own?” | | 106:08 | Crack on fun, fulfillment, pressure |
Tone & Atmosphere
Without losing their acerbic edge, the hosts (especially Raven) maintain an irreverent, darkly humorous tone. The episode oscillates between deep skepticism, direct spiritual talk, edgy comedy, and an increasingly self-aware meta-commentary on the nature of ideas, influence, and reality online.
Where to Find Crack Amico
- YouTube: youtube.com/crackamico
- Patreon: patreon.com/crackamico
- X/Twitter & Instagram: @crackamicorap
Final Thoughts
This episode is a quintessential example of the free-wheeling, uncensored spaces of internet counterculture, where humor, skepticism, and spirituality blend seamlessly with conspiracy rabbit holes. Crack Amico emerges as a sharp, honest, and unexpectedly thoughtful guest, bridging comedy and culture war critique with spiritual searching and creative hustle.
