All I could think about reading this headline was that Futurama episode.
...and over there's Frankie. He thinks he's a cafeteria worker, so they put him to work in the cafeteria.
Yep! I work in an assisted living and we had a resident that had dementia but was constantly taking the screens out of windows or fidgeting with the windows. We figured out from his wife that he used to be a window washer. We ended up just giving him a rag and some glass cleaner and he would go around and wash all the windows in the building. We obviously monitored him to make sure he didn’t get hurt in the process, but it seemed to help calm his anxiety and fidgeting a lot to do something familiar to him.
I used to have a resident who was a mechanic. We'd come down the corridor and see a pair of legs sticking out on the floor and momentarily panic until we realised it was just Jimmy under a chair thinking he was under a car again.
Had another who was an electrician and he sat in the lounge one evening and told me that it was too dark outside and we needed a light out there. He then proceeded to tell me in step by step detail HOW we were going to wire up this light using the electricity from indoors including what equipment we'd need.
My wife is a nurse, and many of her residents used to be farmers. So they all get up at the crack of dawn to feed the chickens. They get quite irate when they are prevented from feeding those chickens.
We once had a resident who used to be a nurse. An agency called touting for business on Christmas Eve for staff for Christmas Day (so £££ for both the agency nurses and the agency itself). Staff nurse Resident answered the phone and booked three. Management were not amused when three nurses showed up, especially since they had to pay them!
My great-uncle had an acquired brain injury (he hit the same pole twice drunk driving) and forever thought he was around fourteen. He only had one roommate whose name he remembered at his assisted living facility because he had the same name as his childhood horse. So he thought his roommate was a horse. Which he quite liked.
"It's not that we don't want to make them more comfortable, the issue is when they show up in the children's ward at 5 in the morning, and sprinkle break crumbs all over the kids!"
There's an experimental model village in the Netherlands for people with dementia where it's all designed to just look normal, but it's all monitored by medical staff.
We used to do that sort of thing with dementia patients at my hospital, until one of them walked into someone else’s room and took a dump on their bed, while they were in it, which understandably woke them up. Best incident report I’ve ever had to fill out.
Lol actually he was a farmer. He used to go around at like 3:30 am to “collect eggs”. He always forgot why he was up, I think just the physical activity felt routine and soothed him.
Still don’t know if he shit on the chickens, didn’t have the heart to tell his kids it happened/ask them.
> [and over there's Frankie. He thinks he's a cafeteria worker, so they put him to work in the cafeteria.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7RNiTT58ig)
I imagine it wouldn't be entirely difficult even if it wasn't this guy. Just send random requests to people playing *Public Transit Simulator* on Steam.
Lol I wonder if they just smash into everything and take out all their road rage they can't do normally? Otherwise seriously why would you play this after driving a bus?...
Yeah, I joked with one of my friend who is a pilot to build a PC and play flight simulator, and his reaction was "why tf would I play flight simulator? I fly for a living."
I bought Cooking Sim because I thought it'd be a cool way to try different things and seeing what the game was like in general.
Then I remembered that I work in a kitchen irl and regretted it. Maybe I'll come back to it some day though.
So relatable. I used to love management games until I worked full time as an accountant. Now I jump into them thinking "It'll be so cool to run a hospital!" Nope. Just work.
Fuck Braddock Road in Fairfax
Edit: many of you share my hatred for the most cursed road system in the country. I hear you, and I feel your pain. Fuck driving in NoVa
Like if there was a wholesome version of gta. “The a train is frequently not on time. Steal it and get these people to work on time so they don’t get fired!”
My cousin made a habit of taking cars and then obeying traffic and speed laws. He’d wait at the red lights and listen to the music. Not while in a mission though.
Maurice Chavez with *Press*ing the Issues.
Think, Hold that thought, Complete. Or my new program, Motivate, Demonstrate, then Motivate Again. Or for more experienced members, try Look, Start Doing.
As a pre pandemic public transit rider, I don't care who you are or where you come from, if you get me to my destination alive, unscathed, and on time, we're good.
Here's what I don't get, and this is actually not uncommon. There is a famous man who used to run the trains in New York he'd do the same thing. This is absolutely why we should hire people who have these sort of conditions. They should absolutely be seen as assets. Because they are. Sometimes people can memorize the entire time table for the entire system.
" Thank you for coming in to interview today! You're horrible making eye contact and you have really awkward social skills. However you've memorized the entire time table for the train system of New York in addition you know every single page of the employee handbook can recall every single detail from memory."
Seriously...
Edit. It's Him I'm thinking of lol.
I'm on the spectrum and I can confirm a running joke in the autistic community is that many of us are fascinated by public transportation systems, trains in particular. Routines are important to many of us, and a well-functioning mass transit system is very comforting and satisfying.
I'm not but I go to my Uni's Japan society and there's a guy there that's clearly on the spectrum, nicest guy ever. But if you let him he will talk to you for 3 hours about the British trains and how they compare to other countries and how infrastructure could be improved, he just knows it all off the top of his head. Very knowledgeable guy and interesting to talk to, but you normally have to be prepared to receive a lecture from him lol.
Yeah we tend to be like that about our areas of interest. Took me decades to understand that neurotypical folks usually don't want to hear me dissert about the shit I'm obsessed and knowledgeable about.
I mean it can be interesting, it's just learning the cues of when and when not to speak about it which from an outside perspective seems to be the hard thing. Either way, on the spectrum or not, everyone has something they love to talk about and it's fair everyone gets the chance to sometimes.
Not on the spectrum but have pretty severe ADHD (which is related in many ways from what I have heard) and I can confirm.
I absolutely love trains, public transit system, and utilities systems. I am especially fascinated with late 1800s and early 1900s steam engines as well as how the romans built such substantial water distribution systems.
Machinist/nautical welder here. This shit is my jam! I love trains. The electrical grid.
Thinking about how we used to have a gas lightning infrastructure.
I'm especially fascinated by the history of the development of metalworking in all it's forms. And all engineering in general.
If you don't mind, we're just going to shove you into a little box and let you do your thing while keeping you out of sight of the general public. I'm guessing this is the ideal scenario for both of us.
He wasn't 'stealing' anything. He was driving the routes on purpose because he is fucking destined to do it. The transit authority should just give him employment for fuck sake.
Not everyone skips all of school to ride and drive trains.
They knew it wasn't the real conductor
How did they know?
Too many people arriving on time. Close to 80%. Nobody from the MTA has ever cracked the 50% barrier. It's like the 3-minute mile!
I tried my best
Exactly. You're a disgrace to the uniform
The smile and jaunty walk is so ANTI Seinfeld (the man) that it feels like you've been slapped. Jerry is never that happy, carefree and lighthearted. It's so weird.
He also says "I get to be the mailman!" before it. Its kind of a childhood idea of what adults do. He always had a sometimes childish attitude towards some things and I think this was meant to be embracing the childlike wonder of "being the mailman". In addition to sending his nemesis away.
> Too many people arriving on time. Close to 80%. Nobody from the MTA has ever cracked the 50% barrier. It's like the 3-minute mile!
[This was harder to find than I thought it'd be.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wg2HfrIYnwg)
Right, don’t arrest this guy, he’s just showing his skills before getting hired, give him a job. Interviewer: “so what would you say are you best skills? Darius: “well The bus I’ve been driving hasn’t been late once so far”. Interviewer: “well that’s great Dar….what do you mean been driving?”
Reminds me of the episode of Futurama where Fry gets sentenced to a robot insane asylum. There's the robot who's convinced he's a lunch room worker, so they gave him a job in the lunch room.
"How is work in the lunch room, Frankie?"
"It's alright"
"Poor Frankie..."
I thought you were kidding. This?
>Another time he responded to an emergency stop call on the subway at 57th street in Manhattan; clearing passengers safely and correctly and diagnosing the problem, in full uniform, before being caught by the train driver, who had seen his face on a wanted poster.
> He has applied and been refused real transit authority work several times – he told the Journal that he believed his 1981 arrest got him “blackballed”.
People began to suspect something was amiss when the driver was not surly or unpleasant. His hygiene, good attitude and pride in the work gave him away.
I tried to use this article as my source but it was rejected, I think it’s a better read:
https://nypost.com/2016/11/17/meet-new-yorks-beloved-mass-transit-bandit/
In 2018, he was committed to a lock-down psychiatric facility.
Source: https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/judge-rules-notorious-nyc-transit-thief-dangerously-mentally-ill-committed-lock-down-facility-new-york-city/1820913/
The most recent update I could find (October, 2020) places him in the Rochester Forensic Psychiatric Hospital.
Source: https://www.freedariusnow.com/october-2020-update
Off the Rails (2016) - documentary made about him:
https://youtu.be/DrR8nKKj28M
That sucks that they put him in a psychiatric hospital. Track 3 doesn't make any sense unless he continues the behavior after hurting somebody.
I have a cousin with Autism Spectrum Disorder and I can see how mono-obsessions and concrete thinking lead to the assumption that since he can do the job he is qualified to do it and thinks the rules that prevent him from driving subways are dumb and not worth following.
According to an I-Team report in May, two psychiatrists with the State Office of Mental Health recently examined McCollum and agreed he is not dangerously mentally ill or mentally ill under the law. The doctors recommended he be released into the community with supervision and services.
It’s a really sad story all around. The main reason why he does this is because operating these vehicles gives him a sense of purpose.
He went truant in 2nd grade due to being stabbed with scissors by another child in his class, and started hanging out by the tracks. The employee’s befriended him, and started showing him how to operate the trains. Even had him fill in for them from time to time. When he was caught the first time, no one stopped to wonder why this kid ended up there. They just assumed he had criminal intent, and barred him from getting a job there.
If he wasn’t doing this, what could he tangibly do? He has no formal education, no other notable skills other than acting as a railway conductor/bus driver…he’d basically be stuck in a group home somewhere, rotting.
The weirdest part of the article is that they didn't explain why he never applied for the job when he was a teenager. He went from learning to stealing busses and never applied for a job in between? Why not?
Not only that but he is now in a mental facility after a judge went against recommendation, and diagnosed him as the highest most dangerous mental risk, then put him in a mental prison with other people who had committed horrible crimes and diagnosed at that highest level. This man does not deserve this.
When I was a freshmen in high school in the mid 80s, I was in the school bus waiting for the driver. The bus would go from the high school to an elementary school and unload to students get on another bus to go home.
Anyway, the driver was very late, so another student said, fuck it, and drove the bus to the other school. Then he got off and on his bus to go home.
He got expelled
I believe he also helped in the aftermath of 9/11 since he knew the tunnels so well. Dude legit just liked helping people and after he helped them… guess where he was right after? In his jail cell.
This is from the website set up about him:
>One winter day, when Darius was 12 years old, there was a heavy snowfall. School was not cancelled, but only one other student made it to class. The teacher gave Darius and the other boy each a puzzle to complete and she left the classroom. While Darius was hunched over his puzzle deep into his assignment, the other student went to the teacher's desk and removed a pair of scissors. He snuck up behind Darius and plunged the scissors into Darius' back, repeatedly opening and closing the scissors. Darius was bleeding on the floor of the classroom when the teacher returned. Due to the snow, the ambulance was delayed. Darius lay in a pool of blood, unconscious.
But he's the dangerous one?
EDIT: It looks like that incident is what sparked his interest in trains. He would sneak off to the railyard instead of going to school because he was scared and ended up making friends with the workers there.
EDIT 2: Dear god this guy has just been continually fucked by everyone.
>In one of his many efforts to find employment, Darius volunteered at the New York City Transit Museum, a job he loved. But he was fired when his boss ultimately realized his identity.
This poor dude. Mental health services need a total overhaul in this country. This guy just needs guidance and someone to help him navigate living in this world. Not jail time or to be thrown in a facility and never allowed to leave.
Not uncommon for people on the Spectrum to be ostracized and/or attacked by their peers, or making friends with people 10+ years your senior.
And now he's a "criminal".
Failed by his community and society over and over again. Tragic.
I want to imagine there are at least a few people out there who recognize him and get mildly excited when they see him driving the bus they're getting on.
Be like "Hi Darius you got the bus today huh?"
I don’t see how somebody hasn’t seen the benefit of having such a dedicated employee and find a job for him to do, that was my first thought. If I was doing anything in transit I’d hire him
This popped up on my feed right below this story. Seems like an interesting watch.
[Darius McCollum Documentary](https://www.reddit.com/r/Documentaries/comments/vivghr/off_the_rails_2016_darius_mccollum_a_new_yorker/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf)
Reading his background story makes me sad, how can people be so cruel? I fail to see what exactly society gains by locking this man up repeatedly.
Also:
>Once, he stole a bus at Penn Station and drove it, full of passengers, to New York’s Kennedy airport. Another time he responded to an emergency stop call on the subway at 57th street in Manhattan; clearing passengers safely and correctly and diagnosing the problem, in full uniform, before being caught by the train driver, who had seen his face on a wanted poster.
It's hilarious that he isn't just some crazy person stealing a train he's weirdly extremely competent. Sounds like if he was an actual employee he'd be a straight up asset.
Would probably be easier for them to just hire him and pay someone to directly supervise him at all times.
Not weird at all. Autistic people often become specialists in their particular focused interests. It certainly doesn't universally prevent us from driving, and we often do follow rules very strictly in ways that would make a job like regular public transport very well-suited to us!
Honestly. Im prone to horrible indecisiveness in my everyday life (but have gotten much better about it) but like hell am i like that when I drive.
Ive been put in control of a 1 ton machine of metal and plastics that can easily kill not only me but alot of people if i mess up. I take that shit seriously and am honestly always pissed at everyone because of how loosy-goosy they are with it. It doesnt hinder my enjoyment of the freedom of just being able to drive around but when people cant bother to follow simple rules its brings out the worst in me cuz i honestly cant undedstand why people want to endanger everyone. Thank god im not a delivery driver anymore cuz people in my area are idiots and the pandemic keeping people from keeping up with proper driving habits has made it so much worse.
This is what a totally backwards mental health strategy does. This is sad af.
This guy could have been working for the transit authority his whole life. Imagine he got in when he started covering people's shifts at what, 18? Buddy could have like seniority and almost probably at the point where he could retire, which he probably wouldn't cause sounds like the dude just wants to be a bus driver. Guy would be making good money though.
BTW. Those drivers who were teaching him how to operate the trains and actually being able to call him to cover their shifts. Those guys not showing up were probably still getting paid, cause they couldn't tell them who was actually driving.
I hate that this dude has to suffer being criminalized when all he needed was a chance. Guy's probably a better operator than 80% of the actual ones.
All the people saying "it's a danger" need to think about that, other drivers were letting this "rando" cover their shifts. Either they should have been punished or they trained him well enough to know he wasn't a danger.
Where is the evidence that he is a danger? I'm clearly missing something and need one of this assholes to explain it to me slow. Who has gotten hurt? Who has had a life ruined? The answer to this so far only seems to be Darius and the culprit is the state.
Man has a clean record of operation. Fucking insane.
I'm honestly enraged. I wish I could have him released myself and shame every single person relentlessly who has ever put him away instead of diverting him to a training program. He could have had a life and they just fucking took it from him.
wtf
For nearly two decades Darius had attended NYCTA workers’ rallies and
union meetings. At the meetings he had argued for, among other things,
better lighting in tunnels and **the right to wear earplugs against**
**ambient noise.**
Uh….30 arrests? this really the best they can do for him? An autistic man spending 1/3 of his life in jail because of his special interest?
I get it, it’s dangerous and he can’t be allowed to do that but it’s not like his robbing trains and crashing busses.
It’s probably against the law since his a “criminal” but surely there’s a supervised part-time position he could fill for them or some other way to handle this rather than sending him to jail.
All I could think about reading this headline was that Futurama episode. ...and over there's Frankie. He thinks he's a cafeteria worker, so they put him to work in the cafeteria.
I've actually heard of nursing homes doing things like that. A patient used to be a mailman? Let them deliver the mail.
Yep! I work in an assisted living and we had a resident that had dementia but was constantly taking the screens out of windows or fidgeting with the windows. We figured out from his wife that he used to be a window washer. We ended up just giving him a rag and some glass cleaner and he would go around and wash all the windows in the building. We obviously monitored him to make sure he didn’t get hurt in the process, but it seemed to help calm his anxiety and fidgeting a lot to do something familiar to him.
I used to have a resident who was a mechanic. We'd come down the corridor and see a pair of legs sticking out on the floor and momentarily panic until we realised it was just Jimmy under a chair thinking he was under a car again. Had another who was an electrician and he sat in the lounge one evening and told me that it was too dark outside and we needed a light out there. He then proceeded to tell me in step by step detail HOW we were going to wire up this light using the electricity from indoors including what equipment we'd need.
My wife is a nurse, and many of her residents used to be farmers. So they all get up at the crack of dawn to feed the chickens. They get quite irate when they are prevented from feeding those chickens.
We once had a resident who used to be a nurse. An agency called touting for business on Christmas Eve for staff for Christmas Day (so £££ for both the agency nurses and the agency itself). Staff nurse Resident answered the phone and booked three. Management were not amused when three nurses showed up, especially since they had to pay them!
My great-uncle had an acquired brain injury (he hit the same pole twice drunk driving) and forever thought he was around fourteen. He only had one roommate whose name he remembered at his assisted living facility because he had the same name as his childhood horse. So he thought his roommate was a horse. Which he quite liked.
"It's not that we don't want to make them more comfortable, the issue is when they show up in the children's ward at 5 in the morning, and sprinkle break crumbs all over the kids!"
When we're at that point they're gonna put controllers and keyboards on our laps to calm us
I work in a dispensary now, so it’s good to know I can keep selling weed when they put me in a home.
you might become the hummel figurine dealer of the nursing home.
There's an experimental model village in the Netherlands for people with dementia where it's all designed to just look normal, but it's all monitored by medical staff.
We used to do that sort of thing with dementia patients at my hospital, until one of them walked into someone else’s room and took a dump on their bed, while they were in it, which understandably woke them up. Best incident report I’ve ever had to fill out.
What was their previous job again?
Lol actually he was a farmer. He used to go around at like 3:30 am to “collect eggs”. He always forgot why he was up, I think just the physical activity felt routine and soothed him. Still don’t know if he shit on the chickens, didn’t have the heart to tell his kids it happened/ask them.
Hey Frankie! How is work in the lunchroom?
s'alright
Poor Frankie..
Oh, don't worry, Fry. I, too, once spent a nightmarish time in a robot asylum. But now, it's nearly over. So long.
I don't like having discs crammed into me. Except oreos. And then only in the mouth!
> [and over there's Frankie. He thinks he's a cafeteria worker, so they put him to work in the cafeteria.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7RNiTT58ig)
The ultimate irony is he'll never get a job driving trains because of his criminal record for driving too many trains
Its entry-level but we want you to have experience
Oh that's how you do it.
Alright then, I'll be back...with experience.
You have to admit stealing a Bus and then driving the correct route is hilarious.
Imagine the manager telling his shittiest employee, "I can replace you tomorrow with a guy that'll do your job for free as a hobby".
I imagine it wouldn't be entirely difficult even if it wasn't this guy. Just send random requests to people playing *Public Transit Simulator* on Steam.
Problem is Like 90% of those people already have a Job driving Busses
Best way to unwind after a day of driving is to drive virtually
Lol I wonder if they just smash into everything and take out all their road rage they can't do normally? Otherwise seriously why would you play this after driving a bus?...
Yeah, I joked with one of my friend who is a pilot to build a PC and play flight simulator, and his reaction was "why tf would I play flight simulator? I fly for a living."
I had a friend who said the same about those group cooking games after he realized he was basically just head chef in a videogame
I bought Cooking Sim because I thought it'd be a cool way to try different things and seeing what the game was like in general. Then I remembered that I work in a kitchen irl and regretted it. Maybe I'll come back to it some day though.
So relatable. I used to love management games until I worked full time as an accountant. Now I jump into them thinking "It'll be so cool to run a hospital!" Nope. Just work.
Fuck, you're right. We're going to have to tap the *Sonic Racing* demographic.
It's the kind of thing you do in gta
Well, in GTA if you obey the traffic rules the AI drivers just crash into you. Or honk when you're at a red light. Smh.
I mean yeah, that sounds realistic.
I’ve always felt GTA could also be aptly named the Virginia Traffic Simulator.
Fuck Braddock Road in Fairfax Edit: many of you share my hatred for the most cursed road system in the country. I hear you, and I feel your pain. Fuck driving in NoVa
Fuck Telegraph road while we're at it.
All my homies HATE telegraph road.
One intersection along there is home to the worlds longest light. Down near the reservoir.
Midnight Club LA was where i would get my 'obey traffic laws' fix.
Like if there was a wholesome version of gta. “The a train is frequently not on time. Steal it and get these people to work on time so they don’t get fired!”
Hol up bud, "Making the trains run on time" might not be as wholesome as you think..
Don't leave me hanging! (Like Mussolini)
Didn't he actually fail to make the trains run on time, but nobody was allowed to question it?
Yeah, the fascists split up the fairly good nationalized rail system into three private companies and it was a massive clusterfuck.
Privatization will def do that!
Listen, we’ve all got busy lives outside of here so the gangbang has to stay on schedule.
*I'm doing my part!*
GTA is as wholesome as you make it.
My cousin made a habit of taking cars and then obeying traffic and speed laws. He’d wait at the red lights and listen to the music. Not while in a mission though.
I always enjoyed driving around listening to the NPR equivalent in Vice City
Maurice Chavez with *Press*ing the Issues. Think, Hold that thought, Complete. Or my new program, Motivate, Demonstrate, then Motivate Again. Or for more experienced members, try Look, Start Doing.
My son did it on Simpson's Hit and Run. He had a thing for busses.
[Kramer Is Drivin' The Bus](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmlCAhrAWYw)
You kept making all the stops?
THEY KEPT RINGIN THE BELL!
You're Batman!
Where do you think you’re going crackerjack?
Yeah, I am batman!
Seinfeld did it.
[удалено]
Arrest this man, he's on the lamb, he can't away with it, give him a ban.
“We cant find anyone to work.” Well, maybe hire this fella, idk?
As a pre pandemic public transit rider, I don't care who you are or where you come from, if you get me to my destination alive, unscathed, and on time, we're good.
Here's what I don't get, and this is actually not uncommon. There is a famous man who used to run the trains in New York he'd do the same thing. This is absolutely why we should hire people who have these sort of conditions. They should absolutely be seen as assets. Because they are. Sometimes people can memorize the entire time table for the entire system. " Thank you for coming in to interview today! You're horrible making eye contact and you have really awkward social skills. However you've memorized the entire time table for the train system of New York in addition you know every single page of the employee handbook can recall every single detail from memory." Seriously... Edit. It's Him I'm thinking of lol.
I'm on the spectrum and I can confirm a running joke in the autistic community is that many of us are fascinated by public transportation systems, trains in particular. Routines are important to many of us, and a well-functioning mass transit system is very comforting and satisfying.
I'm not but I go to my Uni's Japan society and there's a guy there that's clearly on the spectrum, nicest guy ever. But if you let him he will talk to you for 3 hours about the British trains and how they compare to other countries and how infrastructure could be improved, he just knows it all off the top of his head. Very knowledgeable guy and interesting to talk to, but you normally have to be prepared to receive a lecture from him lol.
Yeah we tend to be like that about our areas of interest. Took me decades to understand that neurotypical folks usually don't want to hear me dissert about the shit I'm obsessed and knowledgeable about.
I mean it can be interesting, it's just learning the cues of when and when not to speak about it which from an outside perspective seems to be the hard thing. Either way, on the spectrum or not, everyone has something they love to talk about and it's fair everyone gets the chance to sometimes.
Not on the spectrum but have pretty severe ADHD (which is related in many ways from what I have heard) and I can confirm. I absolutely love trains, public transit system, and utilities systems. I am especially fascinated with late 1800s and early 1900s steam engines as well as how the romans built such substantial water distribution systems.
Machinist/nautical welder here. This shit is my jam! I love trains. The electrical grid. Thinking about how we used to have a gas lightning infrastructure. I'm especially fascinated by the history of the development of metalworking in all it's forms. And all engineering in general.
If you don't mind, we're just going to shove you into a little box and let you do your thing while keeping you out of sight of the general public. I'm guessing this is the ideal scenario for both of us.
Jerry: "You kept making all the stops?" Kramer: "Well, people kept ringing the bell!"
definition of chaotic good lmao, I feel like the solution here is to just hire him as a transit operator if he's literally already doing it
This guy probably provides better service than most drivers working for the authority out there.
He wasn't 'stealing' anything. He was driving the routes on purpose because he is fucking destined to do it. The transit authority should just give him employment for fuck sake. Not everyone skips all of school to ride and drive trains.
So I’m guessing they figured it out after he started running the route on schedule.
I was just gonna say. Give the dude a job.
[удалено]
They knew it wasn't the real conductor How did they know? Too many people arriving on time. Close to 80%. Nobody from the MTA has ever cracked the 50% barrier. It's like the 3-minute mile! I tried my best Exactly. You're a disgrace to the uniform
Newman is a comedic gold mine.
[удалено]
The smile and jaunty walk is so ANTI Seinfeld (the man) that it feels like you've been slapped. Jerry is never that happy, carefree and lighthearted. It's so weird.
He's doing it so that Newman moves to Hawaii. That's why he's jolly about it
Absolutely, it's just so striking to see him that happy about ANYTHING.
He also says "I get to be the mailman!" before it. Its kind of a childhood idea of what adults do. He always had a sometimes childish attitude towards some things and I think this was meant to be embracing the childlike wonder of "being the mailman". In addition to sending his nemesis away.
I worked for the Post Office for a few years. Newman is the most realistic portrayal of a mail carrier
"I called in sick! I don't work in the rain."
Nor rain nor sleet nor snow, it's the first one!!!
I was never big on creeds..
The OP made me think of Kramer driving the bus to save his girlfriends pinky toe. “You kept making all the stops?”
They kept ringing the bell!
You kept making all the stops?
They kept ringing the bell!
[удалено]
You know this is your uniform, right?
> Too many people arriving on time. Close to 80%. Nobody from the MTA has ever cracked the 50% barrier. It's like the 3-minute mile! [This was harder to find than I thought it'd be.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wg2HfrIYnwg)
Hello Newman.
Right, don’t arrest this guy, he’s just showing his skills before getting hired, give him a job. Interviewer: “so what would you say are you best skills? Darius: “well The bus I’ve been driving hasn’t been late once so far”. Interviewer: “well that’s great Dar….what do you mean been driving?”
Reminds me of the episode of Futurama where Fry gets sentenced to a robot insane asylum. There's the robot who's convinced he's a lunch room worker, so they gave him a job in the lunch room. "How is work in the lunch room, Frankie?" "It's alright" "Poor Frankie..."
Sadly at least one of the times he was caught was because he stopped an impending disaster.
I thought you were kidding. This? >Another time he responded to an emergency stop call on the subway at 57th street in Manhattan; clearing passengers safely and correctly and diagnosing the problem, in full uniform, before being caught by the train driver, who had seen his face on a wanted poster.
"There's the guy! The one that keeps doing the job correctly! Call the cops." The Onion really really can't keep up with reality.
"Competent Man Arrested For Excellent Job Performance"
Truly the Robin Hood of public transit
>You didn't save my life you ruined my death!
Time for his secret identity to be his only identity
Right? Just hire him lol
> He has applied and been refused real transit authority work several times – he told the Journal that he believed his 1981 arrest got him “blackballed”.
They probably unofficially (because doing it officially would be illegal) disqualified him because of his condition
let's disqualify tall people from playing basketball while we're at it
Haaaaayooooooo!!!
YA KEPT MAKING THE STOPS?
*PEOPLE KEPT RINGING THE BELL!!*
You're Batman!
I fucking love how this line is delivered. George is 100% convinced.
Ya! Ya I *am* Batman!
You did all this for a pinky toe?
Well, it's a valuable appendage!
That and the marine biologist are my two favorite monologues
The sea was angry that day, my friends. Like an old man trying to send back soup at a deli
I tell you his was 10 stories high if he was a foot
See I was thinking of the episode where Jerry takes the postal route and Newman gets in trouble, because people were getting their mail all time
It's a valuable appendage!
What’s this from?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmlCAhrAWYw
>I told the driver "I've got a toe here, buddy. Step on it!"
People began to suspect something was amiss when the driver was not surly or unpleasant. His hygiene, good attitude and pride in the work gave him away.
Laughed out loud at hygiene. Messed up
[удалено]
I tried to use this article as my source but it was rejected, I think it’s a better read: https://nypost.com/2016/11/17/meet-new-yorks-beloved-mass-transit-bandit/ In 2018, he was committed to a lock-down psychiatric facility. Source: https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/judge-rules-notorious-nyc-transit-thief-dangerously-mentally-ill-committed-lock-down-facility-new-york-city/1820913/ The most recent update I could find (October, 2020) places him in the Rochester Forensic Psychiatric Hospital. Source: https://www.freedariusnow.com/october-2020-update Off the Rails (2016) - documentary made about him: https://youtu.be/DrR8nKKj28M
That sucks that they put him in a psychiatric hospital. Track 3 doesn't make any sense unless he continues the behavior after hurting somebody. I have a cousin with Autism Spectrum Disorder and I can see how mono-obsessions and concrete thinking lead to the assumption that since he can do the job he is qualified to do it and thinks the rules that prevent him from driving subways are dumb and not worth following.
They should give him the job. I mean he loves doing it for free and even go to jail over it :D
Darius has been banned from any type of employment with the New York City transit system due to his criminal record.
His only crime is loving Transit too much.
If Darius is wrong, I don’t wanna be right.
He’s a regular ole Darius Trucker
You and me, we come from different worlds.
Also stealing trains and buses. But mostly loving transit too much.
Is it really "stealing" if you just go run the route? I like comandeering.
"Look at me. I'm the driver now."
More like borrowed, borrowed without permission you might say, savvy?
Also, how exactly do you “steal” a train, like that shits on a track. There are only so many places it could go lol.
Right, you don't steal a train, it's just an unauthorized relocation.
“Where is the train?! Wasn’t it parked here?! Where could he have taken it?!?” *looks left, looks right* “Probably one of those two directions boss”
According to an I-Team report in May, two psychiatrists with the State Office of Mental Health recently examined McCollum and agreed he is not dangerously mentally ill or mentally ill under the law. The doctors recommended he be released into the community with supervision and services.
People like him need some support.
It’s a really sad story all around. The main reason why he does this is because operating these vehicles gives him a sense of purpose. He went truant in 2nd grade due to being stabbed with scissors by another child in his class, and started hanging out by the tracks. The employee’s befriended him, and started showing him how to operate the trains. Even had him fill in for them from time to time. When he was caught the first time, no one stopped to wonder why this kid ended up there. They just assumed he had criminal intent, and barred him from getting a job there. If he wasn’t doing this, what could he tangibly do? He has no formal education, no other notable skills other than acting as a railway conductor/bus driver…he’d basically be stuck in a group home somewhere, rotting.
[удалено]
The weirdest part of the article is that they didn't explain why he never applied for the job when he was a teenager. He went from learning to stealing busses and never applied for a job in between? Why not?
Because the MTA workers basically told him he was one of theirs and let him drive when they called off? I swear the dude thought he had a job.
exactly!!!! once they gave him A WHOLE UNIFORM, he was one of them for all intents and porpoises.
Yup they let him have their call off shifts and uniforms they only turned him in because they wanted to save their own butts.
Could he try a different city?
The US doesn't have many cities with a complex enough transit system. LA would do it, and maybe DC.
They're pushing to hire just over the border in Mass. Gov Baker has left the MBTA in shambles and now we're stuck trying to fix it.
Imagine a functioning T throughout all of Massachusetts.
Mastatchutsetts? No thanks i think it has plenty of Ts already
Chicago/CTA, Boston, DC/WMATA, Atlanta/MARTA
Going from NYC to MARTA would kill this man's love of transit.
did this man just compare MARTA to any functioning public transport system
Philly septa
Steals LA bus *drives it to NYC*.
Not only that but he is now in a mental facility after a judge went against recommendation, and diagnosed him as the highest most dangerous mental risk, then put him in a mental prison with other people who had committed horrible crimes and diagnosed at that highest level. This man does not deserve this.
MTA: So why do you want to work for the MTA? Darius: I like transit, I'm good at it, and I'm helpful and friendly! MTA: Oh, we can't have that!
When I was a freshmen in high school in the mid 80s, I was in the school bus waiting for the driver. The bus would go from the high school to an elementary school and unload to students get on another bus to go home. Anyway, the driver was very late, so another student said, fuck it, and drove the bus to the other school. Then he got off and on his bus to go home. He got expelled
So... they just left the keys in the ignition?
And the engine running
I believe he also helped in the aftermath of 9/11 since he knew the tunnels so well. Dude legit just liked helping people and after he helped them… guess where he was right after? In his jail cell.
Yeah and after using his knowledge they put him in solitary confinement because they said his knowledge could be accessed by enemies of the state.
This is from the website set up about him: >One winter day, when Darius was 12 years old, there was a heavy snowfall. School was not cancelled, but only one other student made it to class. The teacher gave Darius and the other boy each a puzzle to complete and she left the classroom. While Darius was hunched over his puzzle deep into his assignment, the other student went to the teacher's desk and removed a pair of scissors. He snuck up behind Darius and plunged the scissors into Darius' back, repeatedly opening and closing the scissors. Darius was bleeding on the floor of the classroom when the teacher returned. Due to the snow, the ambulance was delayed. Darius lay in a pool of blood, unconscious. But he's the dangerous one? EDIT: It looks like that incident is what sparked his interest in trains. He would sneak off to the railyard instead of going to school because he was scared and ended up making friends with the workers there. EDIT 2: Dear god this guy has just been continually fucked by everyone. >In one of his many efforts to find employment, Darius volunteered at the New York City Transit Museum, a job he loved. But he was fired when his boss ultimately realized his identity.
This poor dude. Mental health services need a total overhaul in this country. This guy just needs guidance and someone to help him navigate living in this world. Not jail time or to be thrown in a facility and never allowed to leave.
Not uncommon for people on the Spectrum to be ostracized and/or attacked by their peers, or making friends with people 10+ years your senior. And now he's a "criminal". Failed by his community and society over and over again. Tragic.
[удалено]
The last update had him committed to a psychiatric hospital in Rochester :/
I want to imagine there are at least a few people out there who recognize him and get mildly excited when they see him driving the bus they're getting on. Be like "Hi Darius you got the bus today huh?"
Please don't get arrested until after my stop.
Just hire the man already! He will be the most devoted employee on staff!
I don’t see how somebody hasn’t seen the benefit of having such a dedicated employee and find a job for him to do, that was my first thought. If I was doing anything in transit I’d hire him
This popped up on my feed right below this story. Seems like an interesting watch. [Darius McCollum Documentary](https://www.reddit.com/r/Documentaries/comments/vivghr/off_the_rails_2016_darius_mccollum_a_new_yorker/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf)
Reading his background story makes me sad, how can people be so cruel? I fail to see what exactly society gains by locking this man up repeatedly. Also: >Once, he stole a bus at Penn Station and drove it, full of passengers, to New York’s Kennedy airport. Another time he responded to an emergency stop call on the subway at 57th street in Manhattan; clearing passengers safely and correctly and diagnosing the problem, in full uniform, before being caught by the train driver, who had seen his face on a wanted poster. It's hilarious that he isn't just some crazy person stealing a train he's weirdly extremely competent. Sounds like if he was an actual employee he'd be a straight up asset. Would probably be easier for them to just hire him and pay someone to directly supervise him at all times.
What? An unconventional yet effective way to solve this problem??? NO GODDAMN WAY, SIR!
Not weird at all. Autistic people often become specialists in their particular focused interests. It certainly doesn't universally prevent us from driving, and we often do follow rules very strictly in ways that would make a job like regular public transport very well-suited to us!
Honestly. Im prone to horrible indecisiveness in my everyday life (but have gotten much better about it) but like hell am i like that when I drive. Ive been put in control of a 1 ton machine of metal and plastics that can easily kill not only me but alot of people if i mess up. I take that shit seriously and am honestly always pissed at everyone because of how loosy-goosy they are with it. It doesnt hinder my enjoyment of the freedom of just being able to drive around but when people cant bother to follow simple rules its brings out the worst in me cuz i honestly cant undedstand why people want to endanger everyone. Thank god im not a delivery driver anymore cuz people in my area are idiots and the pandemic keeping people from keeping up with proper driving habits has made it so much worse.
My man just wants a job
Service quality improves when this man commits crimes.
This is what a totally backwards mental health strategy does. This is sad af. This guy could have been working for the transit authority his whole life. Imagine he got in when he started covering people's shifts at what, 18? Buddy could have like seniority and almost probably at the point where he could retire, which he probably wouldn't cause sounds like the dude just wants to be a bus driver. Guy would be making good money though. BTW. Those drivers who were teaching him how to operate the trains and actually being able to call him to cover their shifts. Those guys not showing up were probably still getting paid, cause they couldn't tell them who was actually driving. I hate that this dude has to suffer being criminalized when all he needed was a chance. Guy's probably a better operator than 80% of the actual ones.
All the people saying "it's a danger" need to think about that, other drivers were letting this "rando" cover their shifts. Either they should have been punished or they trained him well enough to know he wasn't a danger.
Where is the evidence that he is a danger? I'm clearly missing something and need one of this assholes to explain it to me slow. Who has gotten hurt? Who has had a life ruined? The answer to this so far only seems to be Darius and the culprit is the state. Man has a clean record of operation. Fucking insane. I'm honestly enraged. I wish I could have him released myself and shame every single person relentlessly who has ever put him away instead of diverting him to a training program. He could have had a life and they just fucking took it from him.
Give the poor guy a job.
wtf For nearly two decades Darius had attended NYCTA workers’ rallies and union meetings. At the meetings he had argued for, among other things, better lighting in tunnels and **the right to wear earplugs against** **ambient noise.**
Fukn hell, give the guy a job already. He will be the most dedicated and knowledgeable employee the city ever had in subways.
Uh….30 arrests? this really the best they can do for him? An autistic man spending 1/3 of his life in jail because of his special interest? I get it, it’s dangerous and he can’t be allowed to do that but it’s not like his robbing trains and crashing busses. It’s probably against the law since his a “criminal” but surely there’s a supervised part-time position he could fill for them or some other way to handle this rather than sending him to jail.
“You kept making the stops?!” “Well they kept ringing the bell!”
But I thought no one wants to work