The Fear Archive

Compliance vs. The Strip Search Scam | 65% of People Would Have Done the Same Thing

58 min · 13. touko 2026
jakson Compliance vs. The Strip Search Scam | 65% of People Would Have Done the Same Thing kansikuva

Kuvaus

It is a normal day. A manager is checking receipts. Teenagers are laughing in the back. Grease pops, ice melts, orders come in. Then the phone rings. A man says he is a police officer. He sounds calm, professional, certain. He says an employee has stolen money. And over the next few hours, people will strip someone, search someone, and humiliate someone — not because they want to, but because they were told to. Starting in the 1990s and continuing into the early 2000s, a man called fast food restaurants across the United States — McDonald's, Wendy's, Taco Bell — claiming to be a law enforcement officer. Over 70 incidents were reported. The most infamous happened in 2004 in Mount Washington, Kentucky, where a teenage employee was detained, stripped, and assaulted over four hours by people following instructions from a voice on the phone. No badge. No proof. Just authority. In this episode of The Fear Archive, Amanda and Mike pair Craig Zobel's 2012 film Compliance with the real strip search phone call scam — and connect both to Stanley Milgram's landmark obedience experiments, which proved in 1961 that 65% of ordinary people would administer what they believed to be a potentially lethal electric shock to a stranger if an authority figure told them to. The question this episode asks is not why the perpetrator made the calls. The question is why nobody hung up. Hosted by Amanda Kagiwada and Michael Ryan Assip. Executive produced by Cassie Jozefov. A Violet Hour Media production. LISTENER WARNING: This program includes discussion of sexual coercion, psychological manipulation, and abuse. Please proceed with caution. Popular Topics Include: Compliance 2012 film, strip search phone call scam, David Stewart strip search scam, Mount Washington Kentucky McDonald's, fast food strip search true story, Milgram obedience experiment, Stanley Milgram shock experiments, psychology of obedience, true crime horror podcast, Fear Archive, horror podcast, real stories behind horror movies, Amanda Kagiwada, Michael Ryan Assip, Violet Hour Media, why do people obey authority, Craig Zobel film, obedience to authority Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

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It is a normal day. A manager is checking receipts. Teenagers are laughing in the back. Grease pops, ice melts, orders come in. Then the phone rings. A man says he is a police officer. He sounds calm, professional, certain. He says an employee has stolen money. And over the next few hours, people will strip someone, search someone, and humiliate someone — not because they want to, but because they were told to. Starting in the 1990s and continuing into the early 2000s, a man called fast food restaurants across the United States — McDonald's, Wendy's, Taco Bell — claiming to be a law enforcement officer. Over 70 incidents were reported. The most infamous happened in 2004 in Mount Washington, Kentucky, where a teenage employee was detained, stripped, and assaulted over four hours by people following instructions from a voice on the phone. No badge. No proof. Just authority. In this episode of The Fear Archive, Amanda and Mike pair Craig Zobel's 2012 film Compliance with the real strip search phone call scam — and connect both to Stanley Milgram's landmark obedience experiments, which proved in 1961 that 65% of ordinary people would administer what they believed to be a potentially lethal electric shock to a stranger if an authority figure told them to. The question this episode asks is not why the perpetrator made the calls. The question is why nobody hung up. Hosted by Amanda Kagiwada and Michael Ryan Assip. Executive produced by Cassie Jozefov. A Violet Hour Media production. LISTENER WARNING: This program includes discussion of sexual coercion, psychological manipulation, and abuse. Please proceed with caution. Popular Topics Include: Compliance 2012 film, strip search phone call scam, David Stewart strip search scam, Mount Washington Kentucky McDonald's, fast food strip search true story, Milgram obedience experiment, Stanley Milgram shock experiments, psychology of obedience, true crime horror podcast, Fear Archive, horror podcast, real stories behind horror movies, Amanda Kagiwada, Michael Ryan Assip, Violet Hour Media, why do people obey authority, Craig Zobel film, obedience to authority Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]

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