Jodie Foster & John Hinckley Jr. (with RedHanded)
72 min
•Apr 17, 2026about 1 month agoSummary
This episode examines the 1976 film Taxi Driver and the true crime case of John Hinckley Jr., who attempted to assassinate President Ronald Reagan in 1981 as an obsessive act to gain the attention of actress Jodie Foster. The hosts explore how the film's themes of isolation, violence, and lone-wolf mythology intersected with Hinckley's severe untreated mental illness, and how his acquittal by reason of insanity fundamentally changed U.S. insanity defense law.
Insights
- Taxi Driver's depiction of social alienation and violent fantasy remains disturbingly relevant to modern manosphere ideology and lone-wolf radicalization patterns, suggesting Scorsese diagnosed cultural pathology before it became mainstream
- The insanity defense is rarely successful and often results in indefinite psychiatric commitment rather than a fixed prison sentence, making it a strategically worse outcome for defendants despite its perception as a legal loophole
- Hinckley's case demonstrates how multiple systemic failures—inadequate psychiatric care, parental denial, absence of gun control measures, and the burden of proof on prosecutors—created conditions for a preventable assassination attempt
- The 1982 Hinckley acquittal triggered a nationwide legislative backlash that fundamentally shifted the burden of proof in insanity cases from prosecution to defense, illustrating how high-profile verdicts reshape criminal law
- Schizotypal personality disorder combined with borderline personality disorder and narcissistic traits created a pathological obsession that persisted even after decades of treatment, raising questions about the sustainability of conditional release
Trends
Resurgence of fetishization of young women in media and online spaces mirrors 1970s patterns, suggesting cyclical rather than progressive cultural trendsMedia sensationalization of lone-wolf killers creates celebrity status for perpetrators, potentially reinforcing violent ideation in isolated individuals with personality disordersFailure of mental health systems to intervene early in cases of severe personality disorders, particularly when family denial and physician misdiagnosis alignGun access and lack of waiting periods as enabling factors in assassination attempts and mass violence, with only 13 U.S. states currently implementing waiting periodsShift in legal burden of proof following high-profile acquittals demonstrates how public backlash can reshape criminal justice frameworks without evidence-based policy reviewPersistent gap between psychiatric remission claims and actual behavioral risk assessment in conditional release decisions for violent offenders
Topics
Insanity Defense Reform and Burden of Proof in Criminal LawSchizotypal and Borderline Personality Disorders in Violent OffendersMedia Sensationalism and Lone-Wolf RadicalizationGun Control Policy and Waiting PeriodsPsychiatric Misdiagnosis and Treatment FailureObsessive Stalking Behavior and Celebrity FixationParental Denial in Mental Health Crisis ManagementFilm as Ideological Mirror for Isolated IndividualsPresidential Security and Threat AssessmentConditional Release and Indefinite Psychiatric CommitmentNarcissistic Personality Disorder and Assassination MotivationJodie Foster's Career Impact and TraumaChild Actor Safety and Exploitation in Film ProductionBrady Handgun Violence Prevention Act and Federal Firearms RegulationManosphere Ideology and Modern Alienation
Companies
Vanderbilt Energy Corporation
John Hinckley Sr.'s oil and gas exploration company where he served as chairman and president in the 1950s
St. Elizabeth's Hospital
Psychiatric facility where Hinckley was housed during trial and received long-term treatment and diagnosis
Yale University
Institution where Jodie Foster enrolled as a freshman, prompting Hinckley to pursue a fake writing course to locate her
Texas Tech University
College where Hinckley enrolled in 1973 before dropping out and moving to Hollywood to pursue music career
Congress
Passed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act in 1993 following James Brady's advocacy for gun control
People
John Hinckley Jr.
Shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981 in obsessive attempt to gain Jodie Foster's attention; diagnosed with schizotypa...
Jodie Foster
12-year-old star of Taxi Driver who became target of Hinckley's obsession; testified at his trial and suffered lastin...
Ronald Reagan
Shot and wounded by Hinckley on March 30, 1981; survived with injuries including broken rib and punctured lung
Martin Scorsese
Directed Taxi Driver; struggled to direct scenes with 12-year-old Foster, delegating to Robert De Niro
Paul Schrader
Wrote Taxi Driver screenplay; diagnosed American fascination with lone rangers and frontier mythology
Robert De Niro
Starred as Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver; provided acting advice to young Jodie Foster on set
James Brady
Shot in the head by Hinckley; became paralyzed and led decades-long fight for gun control legislation
John Hinckley Sr.
Father of John Jr.; chairman of Vanderbilt Energy Corporation; struggled with son's passivity and mental health
Joanne Hinckley
John Jr.'s mother; passive parenting style and denial of son's mental illness; later advocated for mental health awar...
Saruti Bala
Co-host of RedHanded true crime podcast; guest analyst discussing insanity defense and personality disorders
Hannah McGuire
Co-host of RedHanded true crime podcast; guest analyst discussing media sensationalism and mental health themes
Lizzie Bassett
Co-host of What Went Wrong; led episode research and narrative on Hinckley case and Taxi Driver
Chris Winterbauer
Co-host of What Went Wrong; provided film analysis and context on American frontier mythology in cinema
Arlen Specter
Proposed flipping burden of proof in insanity cases following Hinckley acquittal; led to 1984 Insanity Defense Reform...
William Carpenter
Lead expert for Hinckley's defense team; diagnosed schizophrenia and argued Hinckley lacked emotional understanding o...
Sarah Brady
Wife of James Brady; fought for decades for gun control legislation following her husband's shooting
Mark David Chapman
Murdered John Lennon in December 1980; Hinckley's obsession with Lennon pivoted to Jodie Foster after this event
Quotes
"I think there's a part of me that has been made resilient by what I've done for a living and has been able to control my emotions in order to do that in a role. When you're older, those survival skills get in the way and you have to learn how to ditch them when they're not serving you anymore."
Jodie Foster•Fresh Air interview with Terry Gross, 2024
"I was going to kill the president. The individual name of the man was irrelevant. Maybe for the first time in my life, I could say that I'd accomplished something."
John Hinckley Jr.•2025 memoir
"I need help getting out of bed, help taking a shower, help getting dressed and dammit, I need help going to the bathroom. I guess I'm paying for their convenience."
James Brady•Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, 1989
"Taxi Driver didn't get me interested in Jodie, but it reached out and yanked me into her world, or at least the world I saw on screen. It didn't just make me fall further for her. It showed me who I could become and why I should try so hard to do so."
John Hinckley Jr.•2025 memoir
"I started perceiving death in the most mundane but distressing events. Being photographed felt like being shot. It still does."
Jodie Foster•Esquire article 'Why Me?'
Full Transcript
M&Ms for Marvel, take one. I am Wolverine. That was super... Thanks. ...parable. Oh. Where's the confidence? Where's the bravado? Come on, like this. Wow. There. I am Wolverine. Wait, I thought you were gonna be Deadpool. Well, I am. I don't get it. Is your superpower disappointing me? Scan your pack to win heroic Marvel prizes. M&Ms and Marvel, it's more fun together. See full terms and conditions when you scan. To what went wrong, your favorite podcast, full stop, that just so happens to be about movies and how it's nearly impossible to make them, let alone a good one, let alone a movie that maybe kind of inspired someone to try to kill the president? I am one of your hosts, Lizzie Bassett, here as always with Chris Winterbauer. But because we are talking true crime today, as it relates to Taxi Driver, spoiler alert, that's the movie, we have enlisted some experts. To join us. I am extremely excited. I'm an enormous fan of their show. I've listened for years. We have Saruti Bala and Hannah McGuire here with us from Red Handed. Thank you both so, so much for being here. Thank you for having us. Thank you for having us. We're really excited. And I think Taxi Driver is quite a good, I was gonna say microcosm, that's not quite the right word. It's a good parallel to what it's like being a true crime podcast. I'm just slowly watching the world decay around you and getting more and more angry every time someone else turns out to be a pedophile. I have to admit, I rewatched the first half an hour just now and I was like, am I? Am I Travis? Has it got like that now? I don't know. I'll just stay inside for a bit. No Taxis for me. I reckon you've got two good years. Two good years in you before we get there. I was also meant to watch it and I failed in the mission. I was told about it with ample notice, but I have been very bad because I have been either writing the Cory Richens script because obviously she's been found guilty day before yesterday and also watching Married at First Sight Australia. I'm not gonna lie because I'm a trash person. Chris is mad at me because I've been watching Love is Blind instead of Seven Samurai. So we're in the same boat here. I've also watched all of that. So, you know, if any of those references come up, I'm all in. Have you seen Taxi Driver before ever? Years and years and years ago, as Hannah will tell you, I am really notoriously bad at not having watched a lot of like the classic movies that everyone should have watched. Like I'm quite bad at that. Like I have really terrible taste in films because I almost exclusively watch horror films. That's great taste. And like the worst horror films out there. Now, I don't think anyone can have bad taste. You just have your taste in movies. That's what we want to celebrate on this show. And also a bunch of our audience probably will not have watched Taxi Driver. You can be a surrogate for those people as we make fun of them relentlessly. All right, Lizzie, please continue. Perfect. I'm here. I'm here for Taxi Driver. Let's go. Taxi Driver is a bit of a horror film, I would argue. You know the premise. You've seen it before. Hannah, you watched at least part of it. Chris and I have obviously rewatched it because we are going to be covering Taxi Driver. That episode will air on Monday. But because there's so much to cover on Taxi Driver itself, we wanted to separate out the story of Jodie Foster and John Hinckley Jr., which is what we're going to be talking about today. Before we jump in, I kind of want to get everybody's reactions to what you remember about the film or what you experienced from just watching it. And I guess particularly focusing a little bit on Jodie Foster's character in this movie. Hannah, what did you pick up on from the bit that you watched? I suppose my reaction to Jodie Foster specifically, we've just done our Patreon show under the diva, which is every week. And we did quite a lot of unpacking of the Louis Theroux Manitouille documentary. And my gut reaction to Jodie Foster was just like, oh my god, how little has changed. How all of these themes still exactly the same. And still so at the front of everyone's minds would be my gut reaction. So that was my experience too, is I could not believe how much this movie could have been released yesterday. And it would have been like, you don't have to change a thing. Even down to Jodie Foster talking about, you know, being a Libra and like, that's why we get along in the different air signs. It really blew me away. It feels extremely modern, particularly as it relates to the manosphere and the sort of red pill community. It's like, I mean, Scorsese really saw something, I think, before it had become mainstream the way that it has today. And that's what he put on screen. And it really freaked me out. Do you know how old she was when this was filmed? No, in my head, she's always just Tallulah and Bugsy Malone. So like, I just don't, how she's timeless. Wasn't she 15? Was she 15? No, she's 12. I was going to say she looks younger. Hannah's face is saying my feelings about that. Chris, what's your take on this? And also, her being 12. Not great, Bob. Well, we should mention Paul Schrader, who wrote the movie, I think, deserves a lot of the credit for diagnosing the American fascination with like, lone Rangers and lone gunslingers. This is a very... Yes, I'm sorry, absolutely. American frontier based mythology. And this movie kind of follows a couple of movies, The Dirty Harry series with Clint Eastwood, which features the 44 Magnum that he buys, that he kind of fetishizes in this movie. Yeah, it's all a fantasy. And then this other movie with Charles Bronson called Death Wish, that is totally absurd. That is, it's the, you know, the John Wick, like, dead wife revenge fantasy, but we have now that type of movie like taken, right, with Liam Neeson. Like those, this is the prototype. This movie is riffing or making fun of, I feel like the prototype of those movies. And there's a scene in this movie later where he's monologuing his own descent into madness, and he has to do it like a retake because he gets it wrong. And it's like very, very much of course, he's just making fun of him. But I completely agree. It feels extremely modern. And yeah, this was a moment when we were, I think we think of fetishizing or young women as a more modern trend because of like 90s pop stars or something like that, Britney Spears, Jean Benet Ramsey. But this has been going on forever. And I think back to Since the dawn of time. Yeah. And, you know, around this time, you had like Brooke Shields, for example, if you go back and look at the jeans commercials she was doing and whatnot and Lolita. So it feels as modern as ever. It's, you know, pretty, pretty unnerving to watch. And if anything, I feel like we've swung back into it. And I think Lizzie, if it was released now, it would feel very timely. In a weird way, I think if it had been released 10 years ago, it would have felt completely out of step. You know what I'm saying? It's really in the last 10 years that we've swung back into this, at least in the United States, I feel. Well, today we're going to find out, team, how Taxi Driver turned Jodie Foster into a superstar. And why one fan would do anything to get her attention, even if it meant murdering the president of the United States. Okay. But are you going to tell me what you think actually happens at the end of Taxi Driver? Are you going to tell me what you think the end is? Oh, sure. I think it's a total fantasy. Okay. I think it's not real. I think it's a total fantasy. I think, and, you know, we watched it, we went back, we rolled it back, we watched it all again. It's the way the music, the way that Bernard Herman scores that section, it's very like, it goes back to the sort of very like noir-y jazz that you get earlier in the movie. It doesn't feel real. It doesn't feel grounded, the way that he's shot, even looking in the mirror back at Sibyl Shepard. You're saying the Sibyl Shepard moment specifically. Yes. From when he shows back up with the scar on his neck and the hair, his hair regrown to the end, I think is a complete fantasy. I think he does kill those people. Yeah, totally. I think he definitely kills them. I think I'm probably with you. I thought Schrader was trying to make the media somewhat culpable here too and how like, we're so quick to sensationalize this type of person and create a hero out of them, right? And we show that his, what's so funny is like, he was going to, he was obviously going to try to assassinate Palantyne, the presidential candidate, and then he chickens out and he runs away and then he kills a bunch of, you know, easier targets effectively. But I do agree, the Sibyl Shepard moment feels like what he's dreaming at the end. I would say like, to me, it feels like maybe the newspaper stuff is real, but we're splitting hairs. I think it's all a dream. You're probably right. I think he's dying and this is the fantasy that he sees as he's dying is like, oh, this is how I'll be remembered. Even, you notice when they show Jodie Foster's parents, this is why I think that whole section's fake, they show her parents in the news article that's tacked to the board and her parents are like 90 years old, like looking at, it's super old people looking at the TV and it's like, there's no way she's 12. Like those are not her parents. That's a really good point. Okay, I'm with you, sold. Yeah, I don't, I don't think any of it's real. And I think you're supposed to like laugh at how ridiculous his, because like you are going to jail, sir. You're going to jail. Interesting. And I thought it was interesting, you guys talking about how modern it feels. And again, I saw this film, I don't even know, pre-uni. So we're talking a very, very long time ago. But the idea of that sensationalism around like a single, single killer, like this lone wolf kind of character. Again, that feels very, very current. I mean, even when you look at things like obviously coming from a true crime space rather than a movie analysis angle, if you take a look at cases that have happened recently, even stuff like Brian Coburger, just the media's like complete obsession with this one man lone wolf killer. And he was a genius and all of these things. And it was like, well, no, he wasn't, no, he wasn't. He was just somebody who, who did this thing. And I think, I mean, again, much like the sexualization of young girls, it's, it's nothing new. It's not saying like it's some hot take. But I think it's interesting that it's almost like kind of was going to say like a microcosm or at least an accumulation of all of these themes that we're seeing at the moment play out, especially in the world of true crime. Yeah. I want to start not with John Hinckley Jr. because we're going to have plenty of time to talk about him, but with Jodi Foster. So a little bit of background. She started acting at three years old, mostly in commercials. At about nine years old, she filmed a Disney movie called Napoleon and Samantha, in which she starred opposite a lion. And I would like to play you a little clip of Jodi Foster on the Graham Norton show explaining what happened to her on that set. We're big fans of the Graham Norton show over here. I was nine years old and well, I was working with, there were three lions. There was one really old lion with no teeth, who was the, he was the actual lion we were supposed to be working with. And then there was a stunt lion who did all the crazy like, rar, kind of stuff. And then there was the stand in lion. So three lions. The old lion wouldn't move. And you can't make a lion move because they're 500 pounds. So I was working with the stand in lion. And I guess he had a little, you know, like a little piano wire that was pulling him. And I was, would finish the take and I was going up the, up the hill. And I, all I remember is I remember seeing his mane come around. And then he picked me up sideways and shook me in his mouth. And turned me around. And every single person on the crew was running in the opposite direction. And I'm like sideways watching everybody. And they took their equipment too. And I'm watching everybody leave going like, what's happening? Then I, then I remember feeling like, oh, it's an earthquake because I was getting shaken. The trainer said, drop it. And because the lion was so well trained, he opened his mouth and dropped me down. I went running. And then he came after me and then just put one paw on me and then just waited like, I got her. Wow. Good times for a nine year old. That's amazing. It actually reminds me of an episode we did. If you guys looked at that film Raw, which is like the most dangerous film ever. I don't know why I'm doing this because it probably was the most dangerous film ever. I don't think there's air quotes needed on that one. I know. Oh my God. I was just like reminding myself. And I think, I like how many people got injured. Apparently it was 70 people got injured by some sort of wild animal. Remember that being an underestimate too. Yeah. That there was probably a couple of number. Oh my God. Yeah. That's the publicly released number of maulings on that movie. So, yeah, go listen to, did you say you covered it as well? We did it on shorthand. Yeah. Okay. So listen to their shorthand episode. Check out our episode on that as well. It is a wild ride. I never want to work with a lion. That's for sure. But she was the breadwinner for her family before she was even a teenager. She was well known and noticeable prior to Taxi Driver, which is important to remember. And then in 1976 at 12 years old, she starred as Iris opposite both Harvey Keitel, so creepy in this movie, and Robert De Niro in Taxi Driver. Now, in case you're wondering if there was backlash against her age at the time of this movie, I think the answer is, yes, there was some people weren't just totally chill with it, but I don't know that it was as much as there would be now if you cast a real 12 year old in this. She has maintained that she's glad she did the movie. I don't think she had a bad time on set. I think she had a bit of an awkward uncomfortable time on set just because no one knew what to do with a 12 year old girl in the middle of this. And it's not just a 12 year old girl playing a sex worker. I know. I know. How do you even explain that? Yeah. So they did have her sister Connie, I believe, who was 18 or 19 years old. She was a stand in for a couple of moments. The only ones that I think she actually did stand in for her were when she drops her shirt. You just see the back of her shoulders. I don't think that's Jodie Foster. And then the other one is when she's dancing with Harvey Keitel in a scene that I never want to watch again. I believe he turns away from the camera for like two seconds. And I think they swap her at that point because when they turn back around, you never see her face and he's kissing her and they wouldn't have had him kiss Jodie Foster. They're not Brad Pitt in an interview with the vampire. I was gonna say that. Yeah. Can I ask, because I don't remember, how old is she meant to be in the film if she's 12 in real life? 12. She's meant to be 12. Oh my God. They say, I believe they reference her age and it's 12. I have very mixed feelings about this because the visual impact of seeing an actual 12 year old girl is big. And you know, like, this is real. There are 12 year olds who are sex workers and there are these adult men who are assaulting them. And do I think it was appropriate for a 12 year old to do this? I guess my answer is I don't know because there is something important about seeing how young she is next to these men. It really makes you realize how creepy it is. And I do think that's the intention. But yeah, really weird. And apparently Martin Scorsese, when he was trying to instruct her to unzip Robert De Niro's fly, he would just start laughing hysterically because he didn't know what to do. And so he was like, Bobby, you direct her in this. You explain this because Martin Scorsese was like, I'm out. I don't know what to do here. So she ended up bonding with Robert De Niro. She said he was kind of like boring and weird, but then he gave her a lot of good acting advice. So, you know, I don't think she had a bad experience on this movie, but definitely strange for a 12 year old. But a 12 year old who was shaken by a lion. So, you know, I was going to say, if anyone can handle it. And I have absolutely no doubt that Robert De Niro is actually just boring and weird. I have a very unpopular opinion that to be an actor, well, like to truly be like one of the greats, you have to have something quite fundamentally wrong with you. I think being alive for you is very, very difficult. I think that's what makes an incredible actor, which... Interesting. A hot take. Yeah, you can have that one for free. Great. Thank you. So just this year, she told MPRs Terry Gross on Fresh Air, quote, I think there's a part of me that has been made resilient by what I've done for a living and has been able to control my emotions in order to do that in a role. When you're older, those survival skills get in the way and you have to learn how to ditch them when they're not serving you anymore. And unfortunately, her survival skills will definitely come into play today. Ba, ba, ba. This summer, Helman's mayonnaise makes sandwiches taste so good. So good. So good. M&M's for Marvel. Take one. I am Wolverine. That was super terrible. Where's the confidence? Where's the bravado? Come on, like this. Ba, ba, ba. I am Wolverine. Wait, I thought you were going to be Deadpool. Well, I am. I don't get it. Is your superpower disappointing me? Scan your pack to win heroic Marvel prizes. M&M's in Marvel. It's more fun together. See, full terms and conditions when you scan. Therapy Clinic, one of Europe's leading aesthetic clinics, has arrived in Cheltenham with over 100,000 five-star reviews and more than 10 million treatments performed. Therapy are industry leaders in laser hair removal, cosmetic injections and advanced skin treatments. With over 85 clinics globally and a team of more than 200 doctors, Therapy deliver safe, doctor-led treatments at accessible prices. For verification, head to therapyclinic.com or visit Therapy Clinic Cheltenham today, located on the High Street. All right. Let's talk about a man named John Hinckley, senior. Ooh, plot twist, known as Jack. He was a very successful businessman. He was self-made. In the 50s, he was chairman and president of the Vanderbilt Energy Corporation, which was an oil and gas exploration company. And according to his employees, pretty great boss. He was frequently described as a good leader. He seemed very comfortable, not micromanaging his employees. But when it came to his children, the situation may have been a little bit different. He and his wife, Joanne, had three children. Now Scott and Diane were overachievers, popular, golden children, and Jack was thrilled with them. And then he named his youngest child, born in 1955, after himself, John Hinckley, Jr. But this boy could not have been more different from his father. John Jr. was extremely passive. He never seemed to really apply himself to anything. And this was something his father lectured him about constantly. His father was really struggled with John Hinckley, Jr. John was extremely clingy and dependent on his mother, who in turn was also very passive and not prone to discipline. By some reports, she actually may have also been agoraphobic when he was a child. Joanne and John would later write a book called Breaking Points about their struggle with John's mental illness. But I want to read an excerpt of Laura Obolensky's review of that book for the New Republic. She said, quote, perhaps it is fear of what lies outside that makes the interior of the family so rigid and subdued, like life in a well run bunker. The world of the Hinckles was the rootless, middle class, sunbelt culture that nurtures pro-family values, Christian fundamentalism, and occasional mass murderers. Now it should be noted the Hinckles were Episcopalians, so fundamentalists is a little bit of a stretch there. They were religiously active, but I would not say that they were Christian fundamentalists. But you get the idea. And at around four years old in 1959, the family moved to a very, very ritzy suburb of Dallas in Texas called Highland Park. John actually did like pretty well here. And these are his like, preteen years. He was the president of his homeroom. He had friends. He did well in sports. And he has even said, I'm not even sure how I did this because it never happened again. And in 1964, at only nine years old, he started to descend into very obsessive thinking. Now nine years old, 1964, any guesses what his first obsession was? Skinning cats. No. Wow, we really are. Sometimes it is. Often it is. Sorry, I should have specified it's, it's a famous. Yeah, I was going to say something specific to 1964. What was going on in 1964? Skinning cats. It was all the rage. Is he obsessed with Lee Harvey Ellswald? No. Bit early for the space race. Is it a person? It's a group of people. The Beatles? Yes, the Beatles. There we go. Good job. We got there in the end. Started with Skinning Cats, ended with the Beatles. But he didn't just love the Beatles. He wanted to be the Beatles. And he was convinced that he was going to be the biggest star in the history of music. Now over the course of high school, he started to massively withdraw to the point where he basically disappeared. This is the craziest quote I've ever seen, but one of his classmates described him as a non-guy, which that's, please, I hope no one ever describes me as that. It's sad. The forerunner to NPC, which is my least favorite descriptor. Yeah. I do like, I do like calling people non, though. It is a good objective. Such a non. People described Dennis Nilsson as non, just a grey man. It's one of my favorite adjectives, unfortunately, for those people. His own brother actually said the last time he remembered John having any kind of like emotional reaction or even laughing was about 12 years old. Oh no. And this was especially noticeable because his siblings and particularly his sister were very charming and very popular. And it was his sister who he was extremely jealous of. Now in 1973, the family relocated to Denver along with his father's business. And according to New York magazine, they had oil portraits of the whole family hung over the mantelpiece in their home, except John Jr. There was no portrait of him. He's literally Buster Bluth. I like, he's seen but not heard. It's very sad. That is very sad. So he spent his time really holed up in his room listening to the Beatles and just drifting farther and farther away from reality. I was interested actually, because we haven't covered this case, I was interested in sort of what diagnoses if any he has. And I don't know if you're going to talk about that. He has quite a few. He sounds like he has quite a few. But even from what you were describing, that sort of passiveness, that sort of disconnection from reality, that sort of lack of like, kind of enthusiasm for anything and sort of delusional magical thinking, I was like, oh, ding, ding, ding. Yeah, no, no surprises. It's a typical personality disorder. And also one linked with a lot of, with a lot of would be killers, a lot of killers, a lot of mass murderers. So very interesting. Yes, spoiler alert, he has quite an array of mental health issues, which we are going to get into, which are because this was the 60s and 70s, not treated appropriately. So that same year, he enrolled in college at Texas Tech in Lubbock. And according to John himself, this was around the time that he quote, took the first steps out of his mind, which is such a spooky way to say that. And by the way, when I read quotes from John, they are from the book that he wrote in 2025, which was actually about this whole experience. So by April of that year, John had left college, moved to Hollywood to fulfill his destiny of becoming a famous singer, songwriter. And he sat in his apartment day after day, just waiting for someone to call and offer him a recording contract because he thought that's how this is supposed to work. He said, quote, it would be nothing for Bob Dylan, Keith Richards, hell, even George Harrison to show up at my door and say, John, we heard you play and we were wowed. It doesn't work like that. I thought that way for like a little while in fifth grade, you know, it's, it's, it's, you do have those fantasies of, I think when we're very young, you know, someone will recognize this brilliance, this genius. And that is where, as you were mentioning, you know, Surya, I think you need those touch points of the people in your life who provide the reality checks for you in, hopefully, a loving way, you know, as my mom did in third grade, like you're probably not going to be in the NBA. But this is where you are tall, not for the NBA. I'm tall for women's college basketball. But I do think this is where community is just so, it always, you know, that reinforcement of the need for community and with the modern manosphere and taxi driver, like the worship of self, the worship of the individual, like these things are so, I think, detrimentally devastating to a lot of people. Absolutely. And you kind of would think that with his family being quite harsh towards him. And, you know, that's one of the roles that siblings can play, which is knock you down a peg or two when you think, Oh, I'm going to be, I'm going to be, you know, the next fucking beetle solo. And they're like, no, you're not you weird freak. They were very protective of him. I know. I actually think his siblings, no, his dad is the one who was really hard on him. His mom was not at all. And I think his siblings were kind of always pretty concerned. Like people were, they were, his siblings in particular were like, something is wrong. Okay. So he's not being included in oil paintings, but they're kind of not really telling him. I guess is that's the father, you know, like that's a senior. Okay. Yeah, that would be my guess. Got it. So he wrote back to his mother in Denver and told her United artist is interested in signing me. And his mom is like, great. Oh, mom, get your shit together. You've heard him. You know, that's not true, but whatever. So here's what was actually happening. Over the course of that summer in 1976, John Hinckley Jr. saw a taxi driver 15 times in theaters. Now I would like to note, I have mentioned on this podcast before that I saw Lord of the Rings, the fellowship of the ring, 13 times in theaters, and I am beginning to rethink how many people I've told that fun back to a story. I don't think I've ever, I was 12. No, I've seen some movies a couple times in theaters. No, no more than two or three. Never. I should stop saying. Yeah. 13 is a lot. Weirder than I realized. Yeah. 13 is like, well, he did 15. Okay. Yeah. Well, that's the line. And it was taxi driver 15 times. I was really in love with Orlando Bloom, but only with his beautiful long hair as Legolas. We should mention because of Lord of the Rings running time, you spent more hours in the theater watching that than he did watching. Did John Hinckley Jr. I'm aware. Yeah, I did the math. I didn't share that. But yeah. Okay. So John was so completely taken with the movie because he couldn't believe how much he identified with Travis Bickel. And I think that, you know, this is picking up on something that we've all mentioned, but like, and Sarooji, you mentioned, you know, the diagnosis here, we see it in Travis. Like Travis is very sort of disassociated. He has a lot of trouble interacting with the actual people around him. So it makes complete sense to me having watched this knowing this story that he would identify so heavily with Travis Bickel. And he also started to really focus on Bickel's relationship with Iris in a way that I think I'm sure is not quite the way that Scorsese and Schrader intended. But here's what he had to say. He said, here you had a guy who had hardly anything going on who had no issue spending time with the dregs of society who'd been shit on by so many, but still had a certain compassion for someone else, someone he hardly knew. And I think he starts to kind of idolize Travis because of this in particular. At the end of that summer, he left Hollywood, moved back to Colorado. And at 21 years old, he started keeping a diary, wearing an army fatigue jacket and boots, drinking peach brandy and developing a fascination with guns. Who does that sound like? Andrew Tate, Travis Bickel. Travis Bickel, yes, bingo. But he had not completely given up on becoming John Lennon. So he actually went back to Hollywood one more time to give it one more shot. And he kept sending out his recordings to companies hoping to be discovered. But spoiler alert, he was not. So he gave up again. And the mounting failures were really doing a number on his mental health. He was descending into deeper and deeper depression at this point. He returned to college, dropping in and out of classes, switching majors. And after seven years, he would still never get a degree. He wrote home to his parents during this time, though, detailing a very serious relationship with a woman named Lynn Collins. He told them about the trips they'd taken together, the dates they'd gone on, how they'd met, breakups that they'd had. But Hannah and Siruti, if there was one problem with this relationship, what do you think it might be? Might it be that Miss Lynn doesn't exist? Ding, ding, ding. We have a winner. Lynn did not exist. That's right. And later, when the FBI would reveal this fact to John's mother, Joanne, she was actually devastated because she felt like she had lost someone. Because in her mind, Lynn was the only person she'd ever known to have a relationship with her son. Oh, that's so sad. All delusional. It's really sad. It's also delusional, but it's so sad. It's just like, you would hope that parents have some extra level of insight into their children and are able to... Oh, God. I have a one-year-old daughter. I'm so scared. But then again, you know, he didn't get it from nowhere. There's obviously some delusion, you know. Yeah, that's what I was gonna say. Like, she made it. Hanging about in the gene pool there. It's the way he is. Yeah. It's just really, really very desperately sad, isn't it? But it's not something we haven't come across before. And I'm sure that him lying to them is partly obviously to make himself feel better. I'm sure he was engaging in that fantasy and maybe even writing it down was providing some sort of relief for him. Some sort of way through. Yeah, it's like fan fiction. Yeah, exactly. Fan fiction for yourself, for your own life. And I'm sure it was also probably a way to try and get the approval of his father. Look, Dad, I'm a normal person. I found a woman who loves me and, you know, here's all the things that we're doing in our life. And yeah, it's just... Yeah, it's all very sad. I know. So in August of 1979, he purchased his first gun. In 1980, he added Devastator bullets to this collection. Those get their name because the nose contains a dynamite cap that actually explodes inside the victim's body. All this time, he identified more and more with Travis Bickel. And as he slid deeper into this character, his obsession turned almost completely to Iris and then to Jodie Foster. Now, in his 2025 retelling, he said that the film was not the first time he'd seen Jodie Foster. And that quote, Taxi Driver didn't get me interested in Jodie, but it reached out and yanked me into her world, or at least the world I saw on screen. It didn't just make me fall further for her. It showed me who I could become and why I should try so hard to do so. In June of 1980, John went to see Dr. Baruch Rosen, complaining about pains in his forearm, ringing in his ears, heart palpitations, dizzy spells, and stomach pains. Now, Rosen did note that John had a stone-like appearance and didn't seem to respond to any kind of emotional stimuli. So he prescribed him an antidepressant and a tranquilizer. He prescribed him Valium. Delicious. Thank you. The research on this is pretty mixed, but one of Hinckley's doctors later on in his trial would argue that Valium can impair self-control in patients with severe mental illness like John. There is some evidence to back this up. There's also plenty to the contrary, so I don't really know how much of a role this played in this, but worth mentioning. One month earlier, though, in May of 1980, Jodie Foster shocked Hollywood by saying she was taking a break to attend college at Yale because, yes, she's smart as shit. And I would like to just take a quick little look-see at the cover of People Magazine announcing this information. Can either of you describe what you're seeing on screen right now? We're looking at Jodie Foster looking very angular and beautiful, as usual, on the cover of People Magazine. And it says, Foxy Jodie Foster stuns Chobis by putting her career on hold for college lucky Yale in brackets. The first thing that came into my head was it was probably the sun. I cannot remember specifically which, like, gutter press tabloid it was here in the UK, but they had a countdown to when Emma Watson turned 16, which is the age of consent in the UK. Ew. They did the same thing with Natalie Portman here, and it was almost the exact same coverage when she went to Harvard. It was very much the same thing. Yeah, I remember that. She was receiving letters from men saying, I can't wait for you to turn 18. I can't wait for you to be your first new scene. And this was when she was 15, coming off of a professional. So clearly, there's a recipe here that we continue to follow. Yeah, and Emma Watson went to Columbia, I think, Brown. Brown, that's right. I remember that. Hidious, but it was ever this. Oh, well, John obviously clocked this immediately and asked his parents to pay for a short writing course at Yale. And it was $3,600. That seems like a great deal for a short writing course at Yale. And his parents agreed. And John promised that he would work his butt off at this writing course, just writing and writing in the course that any guesses what might be wrong with this course. I'm just not sure that Yale offer short courses. That anyone can just walk into. I'm just not not sure about that. Oh, yeah, it was not real. But John headed to New Haven, Connecticut, all the same. And in September of 1980, Hinckley, armed with a fake name, walked into the registrar's office and said he was looking for his friend. She was a freshman, but he wasn't sure exactly where she was living. So they handed him the student directory to flip through. And he found exactly what he was looking for. Alicia Christian Foster, better known as Jody. Keep the cuddles and lose the mess with advantage chewable. Just one tasty tablet kills fleas and ticks for a whole month. No mess, no stress. Just one tasty chew. Advantage chewable. Flee and tick protection made easy. Find out more at advantagechewable.co.uk. Easy to love, easy to protect. Advantage chewable. Oh, Daniel, out of all your decisions lately, choosing a Vanty West Coast first class is by far your best. Peace and space to work. Oh, and that's service. You don't have to find the coffee. The coffee finds you. Oh, what's that? The smell of bacon and success, Daniel. Success. Arrive ready with a Vanty West Coast first class. Enjoy delicious, freshly prepared food and drink and service to your seat. Some journeys belong in first class. Book direct with the Vanty West Coast. Exclusions and limitations apply. Right away, he starts dropping notes under her dorm room door. Here's one quote Jody, I love you six trillion times. Don't you maybe like me a little bit? You must admit it. I am different. It would make all the difference. John Hinckley Jr. On September 20th, he finally made contact. He called six times and then Jody Foster actually picked up. On this first call, she's confused. She doesn't know who he is, even though he keeps insisting that she might know him and proceeds to tell her what she was wearing that day. Eventually, she says she has to go and she really isn't supposed to talk to people she doesn't know. And so she hangs up. A few days later, he manages to get her on the phone again this time around midnight. Now Hinckley recorded many of these calls with Foster, and I would like to play you this one. This is courtesy of CNN. Oh, no. Oh, no. You can't. Look, I really can't talk to you. Okay. But do me a really big favor. You understand why I can't, you know, carry on these conversations with people. I don't know. You understand this dangerous and it's just not done. It's not fair. It's rude. Oh, well, I understand that. It's the same thing. Okay. So you just don't ever want to get caught? No. It's been really nice talking to you. It's hard to hear, but what he says on that call is, oh, but I'm not dangerous. I think it's very interesting the way that she handles herself on these calls. She feels very mature at times, but then also clearly doesn't understand the gravity of what's happening at all, which makes sense. She's 18 years old. It's funny to her, and I understand why that would be your reaction. I also just having to live in a world with no caller ID makes me want to jump at the bridge. She has to pick up the phone. I know. She literally never knows who it is. I was thinking that when she has roommates, they could pick up. Yeah. Well, that's true. I think that was my overwhelming response to watching Travis call Betsy over and over again and like, you know, every one in five phone calls is going to be him, but she doesn't know which one. Right. Yeah. There's no way you can screen calls the way that you could now. So while hanging out in New Haven, trying to talk to Jodi Hinckley would also make trips into New York City, frequenting Times Square, particularly the X-rated theaters, a la Travis, and sinking deeper into his Travis Bickle fantasy. During this time, he did also start seeking out sex workers and sleeping with at least four of them, three of whom were teenagers, one of whom looked just like Jodi Foster. He reportedly tried to find that one again, but was unable to locate her. It was during this time that he began planning to kill President Jimmy Carter. He said, quote, I was going to kill the president. The individual name of the man was irrelevant. Maybe for the first time in my life, I could say that I'd accomplished something. And it definitely was irrelevant given that the president he eventually shoots is not named Jimmy Carter. So he really didn't care. The whole idea revolved around getting Jodi Foster's attention. And he figured, well, surely murdering the president would accomplish that. And he is correct that would get a woman's attention, certainly. Yeah. This is definitely again, I mean, not unsurprising that we've come across this multiple times on a true crime podcast, but this idea of people whose lives aren't amounting to much or going in the direction that they feel that they should be. Obviously, there's multiple motives that can exist for a murder. But with something like this, which is an assassination, not something that's like personally connected to you, this especially when it's like a public figure, this is such a classic motivation. It's like, I don't have enough eyes on me. I am owed more dues than this. The world isn't paying attention to me. In this case, it's very specifically around Jodi Foster. But I think it probably is also his dad and other people. And I'm going to do something that is so reality shifting. So it's going to force everybody to... Yeah, they'll have to know my name. And also for himself, also for himself, the psychology there of like, nothing I do makes a difference. I have no agency in life. Everything just happens to me. It's happening around me. If I go out, take a gun and shoot the president of the United States, whoever that might be by the time I get this plan in action, then it will mean I have changed reality in some way. And therefore, I do really exist. Which for somebody with schizotypal personality, which is just one of the many disorders, as you said, he was diagnosed with, it's not unsurprising. That feeling of like, not even existing, not even being in reality, and this being a way for him to almost breathe on like a window and be like, oh, look, I do exist. Like you can see something tangible of yourself reflected back. Well, and he's doing what Travis couldn't pull off, right? Like, we'll get into this a little bit more. But the way that he is perceiving Travis Bickel and Taxi Driver at this point is that he is Travis and they are reflecting his life back to him. It's like someone has done him a favor and they're putting his life up on the screen so he can see it, both sort of past and present and like what to do next. And to your point, like, that's, that is the only way I think he feels like he has an identity is that it's this identity up on the screen. That's me. Which is really scary when you think about like what Taxi Driver is. I mean, I think it's a very important movie. I think it's an excellent movie. I also totally understand how someone like John Hinckley Jr. watched it and felt that. Beginning in October of that year, he started taking quite a few trips first to Dayton, Ohio, requesting a room with a view of the convention center where Carter was giving a speech. Don't give somebody that room hotel if they're asking for a view of the place the president is. Say no. Then to Lincoln, Nebraska to try and meet with quote one of the leading ideologicians. Ideologic, I don't know how to say that, one of the leaders of the American Nazi Party. Now, there is some debate about whether or not he actually joined the National Socialist Party, but he did confirm it himself in his book that he did. And it was, he explains it was literally because he figured I'm white and Christian, it's a club where they have to accept me. It is one of the few places that I can like automatically belong to. I mean, if the Nazis reject you, that is really depressing. Yeah, that's the last club I think you could try. That would probably push me over the edge, to be honest. Well, they didn't reject him. So fine, it was good news. Then he hopped on another flight to Nashville to catch up with Carter's campaign again, but there was a little hiccup because it turns out even in the 80s, you couldn't bring guns on the plane in your luggage. But it was still the 80s. So his guns were just confiscated and he was fined $62.50. He was not charged with anything. For the rest of that month, he kept flying all over until he burned through his parents $3,600 and he was forced to go back home where he overdosed on antidepressants. His parents took him to a doctor who, of course, expressed grave concern about his mental health and they all made it their priority to get him the help that he needed. Just kidding, this doctor basically said he's lazy, needs to get a job and you should probably cut him off financially. This doctor would later admit that he had misdiagnosed John. So John said, don't worry, parents, I will find a job and I will fix everything. But on December 8th of 1980, Mark David Chapman murdered John Lennon in front of his Manhattan apartment building. And this was, in many ways, the final straw for Hinkley. He spiraled into an incredibly deep depression to the point where he contemplated suicide. And then slowly but surely, the obsession with John Lennon's murder pivoted back to Jodie Foster. And now she was all he could think about. He recorded this monologue on December 31st, quote, my obsession is Jodie Foster. I've gotta, I've gotta find her and talk to her some way in person or something. That's all I wanted to know is that I love her. I don't want to hurt her. I think I'd rather just see her not on earth than being with other guys. I wouldn't want to stay here on earth without her. It's really similar to how he thinks he's going to get discovered when he's younger. I mean, he is at least taking some, not that I'm giving him credit or saying this was a good thing, but he's taking some proactive actions here where he's like, I'm actually going to find her. But it's like he thinks I just need to be in front of her, and then she'll see, she'll get it. And then she'll love me. Yeah, she'll get it. By March of 1981, John Hinkley Sr., or Jack, told John he was not welcome in their home any longer because he had not found a job. Now, John's siblings were extremely concerned about his mental health, and they expressed that he should be institutionalized. But his parents did not agree. They thought, ah, maybe he's depending too much on the valium, and they tried to get him into a drug treatment center in Arizona. But that doctor said, none of the above friends, John is A-OK. Why? Like the fact that it wasn't even, I get that the siblings are like, okay, there's something wrong with him. We should get him diagnosed. And maybe the parents were like, you know, somewhat reluctant, maybe the shame of like a few crazy mental disorders thrown in is not like something they're like particularly keen on with him. And you know, maybe they're in denial. But why? If they've got to the point that they've got him in front of a doctor, this doctor's like, no, he's fine. There's nothing to worry about here. That's the thing. And that's where like, you blame, you know, people are blaming the parents like, how could you not see this? Well, they have a literal doctor telling them that he's fine. And also to their credit, later on, they become very active in the world of mental health and like recognizing it earlier. And so, you know, I think they are aware that this was not handled appropriately. So on March 25, 1981, John Hinckley Jr. flew back to Los Angeles, California, and stayed for one day before hopping on a cross country bus to Washington, D.C. So why fly west to eventually go east? Investigators believe it was to retrieve a gun after all he learned his lesson. You can't put those on planes, but you can certainly get them on a bus. You shouldn't be able to. That seems like something that should not be allowed. Anyway, I agree. What do I know? I'm just a dumb Brit. We don't have guns. I was going to say, come on. Get out of here. There's a reason your lives are terrible over there and you don't have to live in the fear of being shot all the time. We just stab each other instead. Don't worry. Yeah. The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is an even worse guy with a gun. And so that's what we follow here in the United States. That's right. It's fun over here. We feel good and are doing great. All right. Well, on the morning of March 30th, John ate breakfast at McDonald's and picked up a copy of the Washington Star, which listed President Reagan's schedule for the day. Brand new President Ronald Reagan. Maybe don't list a schedule, just a thought. He went back to his hotel room and he wrote a letter to Jodie Foster. After explaining to her what he was going to do, that he might die in the process, just like the letter Travis Bickle writes, and most menacingly that he knows what a topic of conversation he had been in her dormitory at Yale, very heavily implying that he'd been hanging around physically, which he had. He wrote this, quote, Jodie. I would abandon this idea of getting Reagan in a second if I could only win your heart and live out the rest of my life with you, whether it be in total obscurity or whatever. I will admit to you that the reason I'm going ahead with this attempt now is because I cannot wait any longer to impress you. I've got to do something now to make you understand, in no uncertain terms, that I'm doing all of this for your sake. By sacrificing my freedom and possibly my life, I hope to change your mind about me. This letter is being written, only an hour before I leave for the Hilton Hotel. Jodie, I'm asking you to please look into your heart and at least give me the chance with this historical deed to gain your respect and love. I love you forever, John Hinckley. A very good blind reading. Happy to help. He's writing this an hour before he's about to leave. She's in New Haven. She's not going to get this note, so I don't know how she's supposed to step in and stop this. No, it's never about that. This is just complete disconnection from reality at this point. Yeah, total disconnection, or it's never about that. It's just about maybe he's thinking like, oh, I don't want everyone to just think I said this later. I need Jodie to know I was thinking it before I did it. Right, it's like the theater of it. Yeah. Well, he's in Assassin's. He's in a musical. John Hinckley Jr. is a character in Assassin's, the Sondheim show. That's true. That has been the back of my head for the last 10 minutes, and it only just cropped to the front of my brain. I had to look it up whether he was, but he was. He is a character in Assassin's. Okay. He hopped in a cab to the Washington Hilton, where brand new President Ronald Reagan was speaking to 5,000 members of the AFL-CIO, which is the largest Federation of Labor unions in the US. At 2.27 PM, as Reagan walked from the hotel to his limousine, John Hinckley Jr. stepped forward out of the crowd of media and onlookers and fired six shots from his Rome R614 revolver, and he was using the Devastator bullets. You can actually see footage of what happened on YouTube, the immediate aftermath, but Hinckley was tackled by the crowd like so fast. It's actually pretty impressive how many people jumped on this guy as soon as he fired, and Secret Service officers jumped in immediately to handcuff him, but the bullets had struck four people. Wow. Press Secretary James Brady was hit in the left temple. Police Officer Thomas Delahanti was hit in the neck. Secret Service Agent Timothy McCarthy was hit in the stomach, and the sixth and final bullet ricocheted off the side of the presidential limousine and struck Ronald Reagan in the left chest. Welcome back to Costa Coffee's Iced Coffee Forecast, here to update you on the week ahead. Today, there'll be unexpected adventures moving in from the west, with high chances of bumping into friends and conversations that go on longer than planned. This weekend, expect a refreshing iced coffee made for picnics with picky bits and nowhere to be until six, because despite the clouds, with a Costa iced coffee made with heart in hand, the summer moments we love last. Costa iced coffee made for summer. Hand, touching hand, touching cheese, touching yolk, sweet sandwich time. This summer, Hellman's mayonnaise makes sandwiches taste so good. M&M's for Marvel. Take one. I am Wolverine. That was super terrible. Where's the confidence? Where's the bravado? Come on, like this. Wow, I am Wolverine. Wait, I thought you were going to be Deadpool. Well, I am. I don't get it. Is your superpower disappointing me? Scan your pack to win heroic Marvel prizes. M&M's in Marvel. It's more fun together. See full terms and conditions when you scan. All four were rushed to the hospital. Reagan underwent surgery immediately after suffering from a broken rib, punctured lung, and pretty substantial internal bleeding. He did make a full recovery, as did special agent Timothy McCarthy. Now, Thomas Delahanti suffered major injuries from the bullet, which had lodged in his spine, damaging his arm and shoulder permanently and forcing him into early retirement. And unfortunately for press secretary James Brady, his life was also changed forever. The bullet had struck his brain. TV commentators declared him dead following the shooting because of the extent of his injuries, but he did actually pull through. He was, however, left partially paralyzed with permanently slurred speech. Back in Colorado on March 30, Joanne Hinckley received a call from a reporter who was the first to inform her that her son had shot the president. She assumed it was a joke. I like that she doesn't believe that, but she believes everything that her son had been telling her up until this point. I know, Joanne. Oh dear. But I mean, I do think because it's the president, right? If it's like, John hurt someone, I think she probably would say, oh no, you know, I believe that. I feel like it's the inaccessibility of the, it's like, how would he even get close enough? It just doesn't compute. He's so passive. I can't believe he shot the president. The logistics involved, right? He's so lazy. That's far too much work. And he's so, so busy with his writing course. Oh no. And his girlfriend. So as for Jodie Foster, she'd just finished the first weekend of her big play and was enjoying a harder and break on Monday before getting ready for the second weekend of shows. Now, as she crossed the quad that afternoon, someone yelled at her that Reagan had been shot and Foster detailed in an Esquire article entitled, Why Me? What Happened Next? She and her friends went about their day, obviously concerned about the news, but not really paying too much attention to it. They're college kids. They're freshmen in college until she opened the door to her dorm that night and was greeted with one word from her roommate, John. Her roommate told her she was pretty sure John Hinckley Jr. Jodie Foster's biggest fan was the one who had shot Reagan. And Jodie didn't believe her. Then her phone rang. It was the dean informing her that the FBI was in the office waiting to speak with her. She vacillated between laughing and crying. The following weekend, she insisted on going on stage for the remaining performances of her play because she felt like she had to prove that she was strong and that this did not impact her and that this wouldn't stop her. In retrospect, I think she realized she probably should not have done this. During her performances, she noticed a bearded man sitting in the same seat both nights and something about him didn't quite feel right. After one of the shows, she received a death threat, ended up being a prank. But a few days after the play closed, she received a very real death threat this time under the door of her dorm. The next morning, her security team told her the man who had left the death threat had been apprehended. His last name was Richardson and he had a beard. He'd been arrested on his way to Washington, D.C., carrying a loaded gun with the intention of finishing what John Hinckley Jr. had started, killing the president. He too was obsessed with Jodi, but had decided she was too pretty to kill after seeing her on stage in her play. Jodi said, quote, I started perceiving death in the most mundane but distressing events. Being photographed felt like being shot. It still does. I thought everyone was looking at me in crowds. Perhaps they were. Every sick letter I received, I made sure to read, to laugh at, to read again. People were punishing me because I was there. They were sending bullets, pulling triggers, exercising the simple law of cause and effect. They were hurting me intentionally without any physical contact. They were manifesting a need to wound and I just happened to be the victim. Jodi Foster would never perform on stage again. And she has acknowledged that this experience is the very understandable reason why. As for Hinckley, while he awaited trial, he underwent extensive psychiatric evaluation. And the lead expert of his defense team, Dr. William Carpenter, determined that Hinckley suffered not from a lack of motivation to do better at life. And this is the earliest diagnosis. But he said it was schizophrenia. His defense team, backed by many experts, argued that even though, yes, he seems to intellectually understand that murdering the president was wrong, he did not understand it emotionally, nor did he understand the human ramifications of it. Now, somewhere quick to point out, Hinckley hadn't been claiming to hear voices or any of the common symptoms of schizophrenia that a layperson might be familiar with. But again, his defense made the point, this is actually an indicator that he's not faking the mental illness, because he didn't try to check all of the boxes. People suffering from schizophrenia can also struggle to define their own identity, potentially why he had come to believe that he and Travis Bickle were one and the same. Now, there's a lot more we could get into here, but TLDR is that he was absolutely suffering from severe mental illness at the time of the assassination attempt. But the question became, was he legally insane, because they entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity? Maybe you two could talk a little bit here about how rare this plea is, and if it ever even works. It's a dangerous game. Very rarely is someone actually found not guilty by reason of insanity. And I think the reality of it is, if you murder someone and you get sent to prison for it, you will have a date when that ends. Obviously, it can go on and on based on behavior. If you are committed to a psychiatric hospital, there is no end date. So I don't think being found not guilty, being found criminally insane is actually better. I really, because it's, you know, it's really hard to get out of prison. It is almost impossible to get out of a psych unit. Yeah, it's a very, very rare, as Hannah said, successful defense that you're going to be able to mount in a court of law. And I think people misunderstand it sometimes. I think they think that it means that, you know, was this person completely out of their mind when they did it? That is a part of it. But it isn't as simple as that because the definitions of right, wrong, there doesn't have a legal definition to that. There isn't a legal weight to that. What they're actually looking for is what was the reason that you were doing it. And there's a really good example of a case that we've covered, for example, that we've really dug into this, the case of Andrea Yates, who murdered her children. Now, Andrea Yates wasn't well when she did what she did. But there are lots of different definitions of what not well can mean. But the difference with Andrea Yates was that she knew what she was doing was wrong, because as soon as she did it, she actually called the police. So it wasn't that she knew what she didn't know what she was doing was wrong. But she felt that by the way in which her brain was working, the mental illness she was suffering from, the delusion she was suffering from, she still believed that even though legally what she did was wrong, morally what she was doing was right, because she believed that by killing her children, she was sending them to heaven instead of allowing them to become sinners, in which case they would then go on to burn in eternity, burn in hell for all of eternity. So it is very, very complicated. And I think it isn't as black and white as people think it is. And I think that's why it's so hard to prove. It's also very hard to prove if people are malingering or not, if they're pretending to have a mental illness when they don't. And yeah, I think it's very rare that you even see it brought up for these very reasons, very hard to prove. And then if you do prove it, as Hannah said, not necessarily the best outcome anyway. Isn't there a case right now going on in the UK with that it's an American, Henry McGowan, he was just found not guilty. He killed his 66 year old father, John McGowan. It was by reason of insanity. That was- Wow. Oh no, I haven't come across that one, no. Looks like a wealthy kid from New York. Really, really tragic story. Their New York Times did a profile on it and shows the complication of dealing with a child that has mental health issues and whatnot and how difficult it is to reach that child. And this man was just trying to get his son back, blah, blah, blah. Oh, it's very hard. And I think- Yeah, it makes me think of Rob Reiner. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. A case that we are definitely keeping our eyes on because I think this is it. People sometimes think that just as long as the condition of mental illness is achieved, that that means that that is enough for a not guilty by reason of insanity. That's also not true. That isn't a sufficient condition. The condition has to be then that the mental illness somehow impaired their understanding or ability to understand what they were doing. Right. And it's just so hard. So hard. And sometimes, like I said, is it even worth it because it could lead to a far worse situation for you if you don't want to be indefinitely incarcerated? Well, I would love to hear you all cover this case on red-handed at some point, because it actually marks a pretty major change in the way not guilty by reason of insanity works. So prior to and including this trial, if you pled not guilty by reason of insanity, the burden of proof was on the prosecution to prove that the defendant was sane, not on the defense to prove insanity. We'll get into why that changed momentarily. So Hinckley agreed to cooperate with his defense team on this plea on one condition. He insisted that Jody Foster should testify, and he wanted to be present in the room when she did. And his lawyers made it happen in a closed testimony that would be videotaped and played later at trial. Only the lawyer's judge and Hinckley were in the room when Foster took the stand. And when he found out that he'd gotten his wish, he told his parents, Mom, Dad, I'll be right there in the same room. Wow. But her testimony disappointed him. She didn't look at him or address him directly at any point. And when she finished, he threw a pen at her and screamed, I'll get you, Foster. Following her deposition, he wrote a poem here as an excerpt, quote, she is scared to death about me. She knew I had bad intentions in my eyes. She couldn't come to me. So I raped her and killed her and shot myself. According to the staff at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, where he was being housed, he seemed to feel like he'd achieved his mission in terms of the assassination attempt because he was famous now. But there was one part of his plan that was still missing. And that was Jodie Foster. When asked during evaluations if he was dangerous to her, he said, quote, not now. If released, I will go the other way. But in one or two years, if things go on the same, no response from her, then I'll kill her. The prosecution argued that Hinckley wasn't insane at all. He just had behavioral issues and your run of the mill obsession with a starlet. After all, he'd booked all those trips and flights. He'd concealed a handgun. He had known when the president was going to be outside the hotel. He was capable of extensive planning and premeditation. And besides, his parents had thought he was fine. They were shocked by the shooting. How could they not have known if he had really been suffering from such severe mental illness as the defense says? To which I say, you took him to the worst doctor in the world, in the world. And also, no one wants to believe there's something wrong with their kid. If you have somebody telling you that they're fine, you're going to listen to them. But the burden of proof was on the prosecution to prove that Hinckley was sane at the time of the shooting. And on June 21st, 1982, after seven weeks of testimony and three to four sources differ, days of deliberation by the jury, John Hinckley Jr. was found not guilty by reason of insanity. And the backlash was immediate. Some people claimed that it was due to the jury being predominantly black and that this verdict had been turned in. I guess the argument was that because black people don't like Reagan and therefore they must have let his assassin off the hook, it doesn't, it's not, it's not true. It's because the burden was on the prosecution to prove that he was sane at the time of the shooting and they couldn't do it. So Senator Arlen Specter said, let's flip the burden of proof in insanity cases. Instead of the prosecution having to prove a defendant was sane, the defendant would have to now prove that they were insane. And Reagan unsurprisingly backed this in 1984, the Insanity Defense Reform Act was passed. So defendants now had to prove that they had a severe mental illness that left them, as you said, unable to understand that what they were doing was wrong in their definition of right and wrong and that they could no longer argue that they just couldn't control themselves. Within years of the Hinckley verdict, two-thirds of states had made it harder to claim insanity. Eight states introduced a middle ground verdict of guilty but mentally ill. And some states actually abolished the Insanity Defense completely. After the acquittal, St. Elizabeth's, the hospital where he was receiving treatment, diagnosed him with the following conditions. And this is where we get the official diagnosis that you referenced earlier, Siruti. So the main primary diagnosis is schizotypal personality disorder. You really hit the nail on the head as to what this is. If anyone is curious because I was not super familiar with this, it is similar to schizophrenia. It is not identical to it. It does not include the same type of psychosis present in schizophrenia. He also has borderline personality disorder. It's very rare for men to get diagnosed with BPD. Usually they just chuck it at women that they don't really know what to do with. But if you look up the... It's vastly more likely that you'll be diagnosed with BPD if you're a woman. If you're a woman. Yeah, because they tend to diagnose men who truly have BPD with having antisocial personality disorder because of the way in which it presents itself. So typically in women, the BPD can present as sort of histrionic behavior, overly emotional, which is like they're more primed to see that link to BPD. But with the men when they see the violence and the anger presenting itself, they tend to misdiagnose them with antisocial personality disorder. But I'm not surprised he's got BPD and I'm not surprised that that's the connection being made with stalking because it's that fear of rejection. Even though he doesn't ever really seem to see that, he seems to think like Jodie Foster will love me. It's just a matter of time. But it's interesting. It is interesting. Yeah. There's a really famous book about BPD which has been sort of like essentially debunked now because it's not particularly sensitive wording. But it's called I Hate You Please Don't Leave Me. And I think it's for people who have literally no information about BPD that is quite a good stepping stone into understanding what it is adjacent to, if not definitely. Yeah. I mean, that tracks here. He's saying if you don't respond to me, I will eliminate you basically. He also was diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder, recurrent major depression, and schizoid personality disorder as well. The hospital noted though that all of these diagnoses taken together were still not enough to encompass the severity of his obsession with Jodie Foster. As of 1982, he thought every single day about killing her. Now, through time and extensive treatment, the hospital reported many years later that Hinckley's mental illness was in full sustained remission. And in 2016, he was released to live with his mother in Williamsburg, Virginia under the following conditions. No contact with past or present presidents or their relatives' homes or graves. No contact with Jodie Foster or any other entertainers. No watching of violent movies, television or online digital materials. No traveling knowingly to places where current or former presidents may be present. And he may play his guitar in private, but in the interest of containing his narcissism, he may not play gigs. Wow. That last one, I wish I could apply to several people I know. No. I feel quite sad for him. It's not bad. I know. In September of 2021, he was approved for unconditional release. And in 2023, he released an album followed by the book in 2025. In 2024, he went on TV following the Trump assassination attempt and urged people to forego violence and instead quote, give peace a chance. But has he appeared as himself an assassin? That's the real I'm sure he's waiting for the call, Hannah. I'll ring him myself. I think he would. Just in January of this year, he told TMZ that he believed he was the reason Jodie Foster was a lesbian. It was simply all due to the trauma that he had inflicted on her. Alert, alert, narcissism alert, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Yeah. Yeah. Again, classic narcissistic behavior like we're talking about before, like this feeling of I don't actually mean anything. I bet I don't have an impact on the world. And here is a way I had a major impact on this woman. She became a lesbian because of me. Yeah. It tracks. It makes sense. I would like to end though with former press secretary James Brady. Now for decades after the shooting, Brady and his wife, Sarah fought endlessly for tougher gun control laws, particularly waiting periods for guns. During a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1989, he was asked if he thought a waiting period would be too much of an inconvenience for gun buyers. And he said, I need help getting out of bed, help taking a shower, help getting dressed and dammit, I need help going to the bathroom. I guess I'm paying for their convenience. In 1993, Congress passed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, which was the largest change in federal firearms regulation in years. The law required background checks and critically a five day waiting period to buy handguns, both of which might have stopped John Hinckley Jr. or at least slowed him down. Unfortunately, in 1998, a new law passed that dropped the federal waiting period in favor of an instant background check, which is what we have today. Only 13 states currently implement a waiting period. In August of 2014, James Brady died at age 73 due to complications from his injuries. His death was ruled a homicide, but the district attorney declined to charge Hinckley and the murder. And that is the story of John Hinckley Jr. and his obsession with Jodie Foster. Wow, thank you. That was really interesting. I knew so little about that, actually. I knew so little about that whole story. And yeah, I'm going to go watch Taxi Driver now, very late in the game. It's a weird experience when you know this story. Yeah, it honestly is more upsetting. Yeah, I can't get over how easy it is to get a gun. Like that has really thrown me because it's just, it's so not in our existence. Like we just don't even consider it. It depends on where you are. California is one of the states that does have, I could be wrong, I believe it's a 10-day waiting period in California, but today only 13 states and the District of Columbia implement a waiting period that applies to some sort of firearm. 13 states. Wild. So what went right, Lizzie? It's a segment we do on a normal episode. It's not these ones. This is maybe bad to say. I have very mixed feelings about the fact that he was released. Obviously, these are mental health professionals that were treating him. They're saying that he's in remission. That's good. Obviously, I'm very happy for him that that's the case. But I don't know. Some of his comments, some of the stuff that he has released since then, it doesn't make me feel great about it. I think it's tricky because in order to be comfortable with release, you have to really believe that he has consistent access to the help and support that he needs. And I, in order to stop him from being a danger to others and himself, and I just, I'm never convinced. I don't think I'm convinced enough that he has that access, which isn't his fault, but I don't think it's that. I don't know enough to say whether he does or doesn't have enough support, to be honest. But I should note that I think both of his parents have since passed away, although I believe his brother did move in order to be closer to John. Wow. I hope he's all right. I feel for him. I do too. I mean, this is a case where just based on the fact that he continued to say every day, yes, I am obsessed with Jodie Foster, I think, about killing her. This was not faked. This was not someone who understood fully what the actual human repercussions of what he was doing. Anyway, thanks for joining us on this bummer of a journey. No, that was really interesting. Really interesting. Yeah. We're in the business of bummering those, we love it. Yeah. And thank you for telling us the story. It was really interesting. Of course. Thank you so much for being here. If you've not listened to Red Handed, you absolutely must. It is one of my all-time favorite podcasts. I love the work that you do, the amount of research you do, the writing is so good and you just handle it all so beautifully. So I'm truly a fan, listeners, if you have not checked out their show, you absolutely must. I think if you like our show, you would really like Red Handed. You are such excellent storytellers that it just always sucks me in. Aw, thank you. And I love your true crime-adjacent episodes too. Your shorthand episodes are honestly some of my favorites. Thank you very much. And thank you, Chris. Thank you both for having us. We had a really great time. It was nice to listen and just react, which we don't get to do very often. So that was, it was very compelling. And yeah, fantastic storytelling. That was really good. And yeah, I feel like I've learned a lot. I'm going to go look into this case and watch that movie. Let us know what you think of Taxi Driver. I will. Watch the whole thing because it's, it is, it's a tough one to wrap your head around. And listeners, come back on Monday for a main feed episode on Taxi Driver itself. All right. Well, thank you both so much for being here and I'll be listening to you. To support What Went Wrong and gain access to bonus episodes, subscribe on Patreon, Apple, or Spotify for $5 a month. Patreon subscriptions also come with an ad-free RSS feed. You can also visit our website, WhatWentWrongPod.com for more info. What Went Wrong is a sad boom podcast presented by Lizzie Bassett and Chris Winterbauer. Post-production and music by David Bowman. This episode was researched by Laura Woods.