39. Satanic Panic and the West Memphis 3
Flipping Tables
Monte Mader
5.0 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 29 October 2025
⏱️ 74 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
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Happy Halloween!!! In this episode, I am going to take you deep into one of the most bizarre and destructive moral panics in modern history — the Satanic Panic.
From daycare witch hunts to heavy metal hysteria, the 1980s saw ordinary Americans convinced that the Devil had moved into their suburbs. Police were trained to spot pentagrams and candles as signs of ritual murder, therapists “recovered” memories of occult abuse, and media outlets like Geraldo Rivera and Oprah fueled the flames. Innocent people were imprisoned, reputations destroyed, and entire communities torn apart — all in the name of protecting children from imaginary cults.
Lets explore how this hysteria culminated in the West Memphis Three case — three teenagers convicted largely for wearing black and listening to Metallica. Nearly two decades later, DNA evidence revealed what fear had obscured all along: there was no cult, no ritual, and no Satanic conspiracy — just a community so terrified of darkness that it created its own.
But the story doesn’t end there. The same architecture of fear — hidden elites, child-trafficking conspiracies, and divine warfare — has found new life online through Pizzagate and QAnon. Monte connects the dots between the witch hunts of the 1980s and the algorithmic hysteria of the digital age, revealing how the Satanic Panic never really died — it just went viral.
Through history, psychology, and media analysis, this episode asks a haunting question:
Why do we keep needing a devil to blame?
Sources & References:
Pazder, Lawrence & Michelle Smith. Michelle Remembers (1980)
Loftus, Elizabeth. “Creating False Memories.” Scientific American (1997)
Victor, Jeffrey. Satanic Panic: The Creation of a Contemporary Legend (1993)
Lanning, Kenneth. “Investigator’s Guide to Allegations of ‘Ritual’ Child Abuse.” FBI Behavioral Science Unit (1992)
Nathan, Debbie & Snedeker, Michael. Satan’s Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt (1995)
Richardson, James T., Joel Best, & David Bromley. The Satanism Scare (1991)
Barkun, Michael. A Culture of Conspiracy: Apocalyptic Visions in Contemporary America (2003)
Argentino, Marc-André. “The QAnon Conspiracy Theory: A Security Threat in the Making.” The Conversation (2020)
Zuckerman, Phil. “From Satanic Panic to QAnon.” Skeptical Inquirer (2021)
Swami, V., Malpass, F., Havard, D., et al. “Metalheads: The Influence of Personality and Individual Differences on Preference for Heavy Metal.”
“Extreme Metal Music and Anger Processing.” PubMed Central (PMC)
“The Psychology of Scapegoating.” Psychology Today
“The Cult Psychology of the Satanic Panic.” Get Therapy Birmingham
“Moral Panics…” Southern Connecticut LibGuide
“Lame Blame: Forgive the Scapegoat to Forgive Yourself.” Ernest Becker Institute
“The Oldest Trick in the Book: Panic-Driven Scapegoating in History and Recurring Patterns of Persecution*
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | In the 1980s, America became convinced that the devil had moved into the suburbs. |
| 0:04.8 | Daycares were called covens, rock bands were labeled demonic recruiters, Dungeons and Dragons |
| 0:09.5 | Dragons was leading to demon possession and violence. |
| 0:12.1 | And police departments from coast to coast trained officers to look for pentegrams, |
| 0:16.2 | candles, and black t-shirts as signs of ritual murder. |
| 0:19.7 | This was the satanic panic, a nationwide moral hysteria |
| 0:22.8 | that blurred the line between religion and justice between fear and fact. People were imprisoned, |
| 0:28.2 | ostracized, children were manipulated, and nowhere did that hysteria destroy more lives than a small |
| 0:33.2 | town of West Memphis, Arkansas. In 1993, three eight-year-old boys were found murdered in the woods. |
| 0:38.5 | The community wanted answers and wanted them fast. And within weeks, police had arrested three |
| 0:42.9 | local teenagers, Damien Eccles, Jason Baldwin, and Jesse McKessley, Jr. They wore black, |
| 0:48.4 | they listened to Metallica, they read Stephen King and Alistair Crowley, and that was enough. |
| 0:52.5 | The state called it ritual sacrifice. |
| 0:54.8 | The media called it evil incarnate. |
| 0:56.9 | But what it really was was the final violent echoes of satanic panic, a witch hunt dressed |
| 1:01.3 | in denim and handcuffs. |
| 1:02.9 | Nearly 20 years later, DNA evidence would expose what fear had blinded people to see. |
| 1:07.4 | There was no cult, no ritual, no satanic conspiracy. |
| 1:10.7 | Just a community so terrified of |
| 1:12.6 | darkness and anyone who was different that it created its own evil. And here's the thing, that |
| 1:17.6 | fear didn't vanish. It just went online. You can see the shadows of satanic panic in Pizza Gate, |
| 1:22.9 | in QAnon, in every whisper of child trafficking elites and hidden satanic networks. |
... |
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