@9:07 you broke character and chuckled, and so did i. The racoon coat bit is helluh cheeky. Per usual, you've illustrated awesome story-telling skills Boss. Awesome. 🖤
24.1 subs. Powering Big Daddy Bad. Skills sir. Seems like last week when you reached 20 k.I have always put people towards your channel when I visit other Mob related channels. We LOVE to see it.
Can you please send me the address to Silbert Limited for quotes cause I’m trying to purchase a raccoon coat but your flyer don’t show up when I google it. Thank you.
Your narration is magical. You speak with a mixture of excitement and reverence that breaths life into stories that I’ve heard and read about dozens of times. If you pursued a career in audiobook narration, I believe you would have a profound impact on the consumption of history and the art of writing by the younger generations. I really hope that the seriousness of these words comes through, because I mean them.
Now this is going to be a good one … being that Dutch was from the Bronx but got wasted in my neighborhood… Newark NJ aka the Brick City 🧱🏙️ the home of the fictional Tony Soprano
Consider me signed up! Your work is unmatched and your writing is getting better with every episode. I laughed out loud at least three times in this episode- the 'his deputy status was revoked.' 'Legs made his way to the hospital and Little Augie made his way to the morgue.' 'Dutch aad Joey arranged for him to go out on disability.' and particularly the 'new sponsor' bit. Happy to be able to support on a monthly basis and get the un-edited versions and older videos that the YT police had you take down. Now to pay a visit to Selbert's and get myself one of those fine raccoon coats!
Yes boss love the series you’ve been doing though I remember the beginning when we got single vids on kid dropper and such but these are top notch there so much more detail you get to go in to so thanks boss. Get subbing guys
18:20 in the film Cotton Club they changed Mad Dog’s brother to Richard Gere’s character and Nicolas Cage character (Mad Dog Dwyer) had a right hand guy…don’t know the actor name who played him…who I guess was a composite character based on his actual brother and that character got shot on the street by the creepy henchman character…he had that line “shake my hand” then pulled a gun
This is the best Dutch man video I've ever come across. I have 2 good books about Dutch, kill the Dutchman and Dutch shultz the brazen beer baron of new yorkand I would be happy for you to have them.
@@afewbadmen. You are welcome. I also have the following if you want them, the hot house, the westies, the mob at war by John Tuohy, and little man Meyer lanky and the gangster life.
Great work! Thanks so much for digging deep to get past the myths and half-myths, and making the effort to tie it all together from the ground up instead of taking the easy way out. Refreshing to learn real details on some of the origins, unlearn some of what we thought we knew, and see how many things very likely went down differently in actuality than in the lazily-rehashed portrayal we almost always get. Keep it up.
Arthur Simon Flegenheimer was born on August 6, 1901, to German Jewish immigrants Herman and Emma (Neu) Flegenheimer, who had married in Manhattan on November 10, 1900.He had a younger sister, Helen, born in 1904. Herman Flegenheimer apparently abandoned his family, and Emma is listed as divorced in the 1910 US Census. In her 1932 petition for U.S. citizenship, however, she wrote that her husband had died in 1910-though it is unclear whether he died before or after the 1910 US Census. The event traumatized young Flegenheimer, who spent the rest of his life denying that his father had abandoned his family. Flegenheimer dropped out of school in the eighth grade to help support himself and his mother. He worked as a feeder and pressman for the Clark Loose Leaf Company, Caxton Press, American Express, and Schultz Trucking in the Bronx between 1916 and 1919.
1:46: 1690 2nd Avenue, "on the Lower East Side?" I find this to be a bit confusing. Anyway, Yours is the most telling of the New York underworld. Not to mention that your account on the underworld, before it would become what we know today as "organized crime" is priceless. Where else you're gonna get any real details the Shapiro brothers of Brooklyn, et al? While I've been fascinated with the underworld, since I was a small kid, for the last ten years in particular, I've been so fascinated with the Lower East Side gangs like the Five Points Gang, Eastman Gang, etc. But I could mostly get highlighted info on these guys. Thank you for being the remedy of that frustration.
My pleasure bro . Obviously I’m not from New York. So sometimes I write what I read . If they get it wrong I get it wrong. I did a few videos on the lower east side that I had to take down. As soon as I get some time I will do them again.
@@afewbadmen.thanks again! And once again, I really appreciate the fact that you're sharing a lot of unearthed info on many of these guys. I mean, for eons, we've heard so much about Al Capone. Nicky Barnes, John Gotti, etc. But until your channel, guys like, the Shapiro brothers, the Fabrizio brothers and even Monk Eastman, were virtually footnotes in the history of the underworld. But if anyone had any basic knowledge of said history, they'd know that these guys were far more than just footnotes. I look forward to seeing more of your videos. And I will be checking with "the boss upstairs", soon! Earnestly!
Schultz tried to muscle in on the Harlem numbers scene cause he assumed black people were weak but he was wrong when it came to Bumpy Johnson and Madame Sinclair
From David A. Wood: Hello again, David from Kettering, Ohio is back here again at RU-vid today (Monday, November 6, 2023). It is great to be back here once more! Okay! Let's begin with the subject at hand. It never fails to emotionally amaze me in that every time I uneasily see his habitually glowering, "dead-eyed" countenance, the reflexively murderous and impassively sinister looking New York City Crime Boss Arthur "Dutch Schultz" Flegenheimer looked much older than he actually was given that he was conveniently murdered in late October 1935 by a duo of Murder, Inc. gunmen, able assassins dutifully working on behalf of the American Mafia's "Five Families" of New York City, when he was only at the relatively youthful age of 33-years-old. Hell! I guess people, especially adult men, really aged much more quickly in the physical sense during the first half of the 20th Century. Goodbye for now and have yourselves a really nice day.
I took it down I will be putting it back up on the paytreon . And I will do a new one . Because I used one book for reference I didn’t want to get any more copyright strikes.
Man whatever Vincent Coll shot at children trying to kill Dutch Schultz's henchmen and ended up killing a child that's a line you don't cross a lot of gangsters back then knew that, the innocent including children are off limits when it comes to gang warfare