Michael Joseph Jackson, the seventh of nine children, was hit with the Baphometic curse early on: his first, middle, and last names each have seven letters, and his full name has a reverse ordinal value of 343, or 73 (M/14 i/18 c/24 h/19 a/26 e/22 l/15 = 138, J/17 o/12 s/8 e/22 p/11 h/19 = 89, J/17 a/26 c/24 k/16 s/8 o/12 n/13 = 116; 138 + 89 + 116 = 343). Born on August 29th, 1958 (19 + 58 = 77), nearly 19 years to the date of The Wizard of Oz’s theatrical release on August 25th, 1939, Jackson inadvertently summoned Miss 42, the Dark Mother, when he played the Scarecrow in 1978’s The Wiz because Scarecrow has a sum of 42 using Pythagorean reduction: S/1 c/3 a/1 r/9 e/5 c/3 r/9 o/6 w/5 = 42. To make matters worse, his most famous album, Thriller (1982), has a runtime of a little over 42 minutes. In the early 1990s, Jackson sought a psychic, knowing he was hit was a curse, but received terrible information as the soothsayer applied the Biblical-Islamic interpretation of seven as a holy number, not realizing it was a jinxed numeral in Master Therion’s Æon of Horus/Age of Aquarius. As such, Jackson thought the number seven was a protective talisman and used it for the remainder of his life, not knowing it was a death curse, and it turns up in ways Jackson could not have anticipated, signifying the hex. The King of Pop taped three of his fingertips, keeping seven free, signed his will on 7/7/02, and his funeral was held seven years later on 7/7/09 (the Goat of Mendes and the Dark Mother strike). He was found not guilty in his 2005 (2 + 0 + 0 + 5 = 7) child molestation trial on the seventh day of jury deliberations. He died on June 25th (2 + 5 = 7), 2009, and his two longest-serving number-one hits were “Black or White” (1991) and “Billie Jean” (1982), both at the top of the charts for seven weeks (USA). Excerpt from Cinema Symbolism 4. (There are other examples, but that is enough for now.)
(Left) Jackson’s Blood on the Dance Floor, released May 20th, 1997 (May = fifth month, 5 + 2 + 0 = 7), sees the King of Pop in a ruby-red suit, viz. Oz’s Ruby Slippers, becoming the number seven, dooming him. (Right) Unaware it was an accursed numeral, he routinely flaunted 777, believing it was white cabalistic magic, not knowing he was fucking with dark forces.
Since posting it a little under a month ago, CS4’s Preface has been added to and augmented significantly. I am considering reposting it here, but we’ll see. In the meantime, enjoy everyone’s favorite prophet of doom, “Crazy” Ralph Neeley from Friday the 13th (1980), and, of course, the vehicle of the hex, The Wizard of Oz (1939).
NBA superstar with the Los Angeles Lakers, Hall of Fame shooting guard Kobe Bryant (1978-2020) was another victim of the Native American/Aleister Crowley Rainbow-Oz death hex. He was born on August 23rd, 1978, nearly 39 years before The Wizard of Oz’s theatrical release of August 25th, 1939. The curse’s two grand killing numbers, 77, the Goat of Mendes, Heru-ra-ha/Ra-Ha-Khuit full grown in the Æon of Horus, and 42, the dreaded Dark Mother, are synonymous with Oz, plaguing Bryant, putting him in an early grave. Through the second half of his legendary career, Bryant wore jersey number 24, 42 backward, ticking off La Madre Oscuro. He started with number eight and won a scoring title in each number, scoring 16,777 (777 = The Kabbalah’s evil forces unified, 1 + 6 = 7, 7777, a lethal grand scale) points repping No. 8 and 16,866 points (1 + 6 + 8 + 6 + 6 = 27, 2 x 7 = 14, 7 + 7, 77) wearing No. 24. His trading cards are usually number 77 (see below), and on his final Halloween, October 31st, 2019, his entire family dressed as The Wizard of Oz’s cast (below), invoking the Saturnian bleating Goat and La Mère Noire, always ready, willing, and able to dole out pain and death. On January 26th, 2020, Kobe Bryant died violently in a helicopter crash seven months before his 42nd birthday alongside his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna (2006-2020); the latter’s nickname was “Gigi” pronounced as it is spelled “G G,” which is 77 as G is the seventh letter of the alphabet, becoming macabre fingerprints of Baphomet and the Dark Mother. Easter egg: the helicopter Kobe and his daughter were aboard, a Sikorsky S-76, made its first flight on March (3rd month) 13th, ’77; 3 + 1 + 3 = 7, for 777, the Qliphoth mobilized; as of the writing of this book, 875 (7 x 125) units have been built. The whirlybird’s model number, S-76, has a value of 77 in simple gematria employing Pythagorean reduction, S/1 = 1, 76 = 76, 1 + 76 = 77. From Cinema Symbolism 4… coming soon. Note: based on this author’s knowledge of this hex, kabalistic sorcery, and Pythagorean mathematics, this author believes these two sinister entities have set their sights on Sandra Bullock and Taylor Swift, but only time will tell.
“I am Oz, the great and powerful! Who are you? Who are you?” – The Wizard of Oz, The Wizard of Oz, 1939. Using numbers to invoke OZ (inadvertently), the Goat of Mendes: (Left) 2000 Upper Deck MVP Kobe Bryant trading card number 77. (Center) 2001 Fleer Platinum Kobe Bryant trading card #77, the Star Ruby, syncing with the Ruby Slippers, blood and gore, recalling Master Therion’s Star Ruby ritual (vide supra). (Right) 2008 Upper Deck MVP Kobe Bryant trading card #77, wearing the number 24 jersey, an inversion of the Dark Mother’s digit, summoning her from the Abyss’ shadows.(Left) 1998 Fleer Ultra Kobe Bryant Gold Medallion trading card conjures the Yellow Brick Road; its number is 61G: 6 + 1 = 7, and G is the seventh letter of the alphabet, giving us 77, identifying the dualistic God of the Knights Templar. (Right) “♫ But the picture has a mustache ♫” – Cream, “SWLABR,” 1967. On Samhain 2019, Kobe Bryant and his family costumed themselves as the cast of The Wizard of Oz (bad idea), becoming his death sentence. Easter egg: the origins of Bryant’s jersey numbers seem to go back to his days playing varsity basketball at Lower Merion High School in the Philadelphia suburb of Ardmore. As a freshman, he was on the varsity team, the Aces, but it finished with a 4-20 record, 4, 2 + 0 = 2, 42, the Dark’s Mother’s unholy number. When he got to the NBA, his jersey number was eight, which is 4 x 2, changing it to 24 (42 reversed) as a continuation of eight, hoping it would bring him luck by inverting the digit representing the Aces’ losses–hey, Kobe, how did that work out? However, the following three seasons, the Aces compiled a 77-13 record with Bryant playing all five positions; thus, 77 is an allusion to the team’s victories his sophomore, junior, and senior years; hence the trading cards are always number 77, OZ, the Goat of Mendes’ numeral, and the 13 defeats portend the age of his daughter Gigi (G G, 77) who perished with him, spiting the remaining family members.
Join Rob tonight, July 29th, 2023, when he will be a guest on Talking Weird debuting on the Untold Radio Network airing on YouTube. The show debuts at 11:00 pm EST; to watch this excellent podcast:
Rob returns to My Family Thinks I’m Crazy Podcast discussing esoteric themes and undercurrents in popular films, with a dash of Master Therion sprinkled on top. To listen, click banner:
Recorded back in February/March 2023, Rob’s interview with Culz Paranormal Studio is now live on YouTube. Rob talks Freemasonry, Gnosticism, and movie symbolism in this brand new show. Watch:
Rob’s June 15th, 2023 appearance on Jimmy Church’s Fade to Black is now archived on YouTube. Listen to Rob talk The Exorcist, Route 66, Back to the Future, The Matrix, and The Shining among countless others. Check it out!
In case you missed it, Rob’s June 12th, 2023 appearance on The Typical Skeptic is now archived on YouTube (and various other platforms). Listen to Rob talk JFK, 9/11, Gnosticism, occult cinema undercurrents, Freemasonry, The Royal Arch of Enoch, and Aleister Crowley. Check it out!
Tune in tonight (June 12th, 2023) when Rob will be live on The Typical Skeptic podcast, debuting at 8:00 pm EST. All sorts of esoterica will be discussed and analyzed, so don’t touch that dial. To watch: