Musician/actor Corey Feldman is the main guest on a newly released edition of Jamie Kennedy‘s ‘Hate To Break It To Ya‘ podcast, as per theprp. During the interview, which was posted June 26th, he discussed about an upcoming collaborative track he has featuring Limp Bizkit‘s Fred Durst and more. In addition to working on other projects with Feldman, such as directing the music video for “The Joke,” Durst recently accompanied Feldman on a tour with Limp Bizkit. But when Feldman revealed that he had originally imagined the song with a guest spot from Faith No More, Mr. Bungle vocalist Mike Patton, the conversation about the upcoming new song, “Paranoia [I’m Not Trippin],” took an odd turn. Feldman continued by implying that he finally decided against working with Patton due to worries that he was reportedly acting in a “cult.”
Fred [Durst] and I have a new song… I put out a teaser for it. It’s sick. I’ll play it for you in the ca,r if you want. It’s really sick, dude. It’s really good. I got like this monster rock band. We have like a supergroup of like monster rockers and they’re all on, you know, they’re all playing. And I got like Robin Diaz from from Puddle Of Mudd and like actually one of Manson‘s guys, a lap pedal player, or pedal steel, sorry, player, who’s doing some stuff on it. It was just this really eclectic group… But yeah, really cool. Really badass song that I did. And I just kind of sat in on it. It was a bunch of guys that were working on a jam and they were like, ‘We need a melody.’ So I just sat down and I wrote a melody really fast. And then I was like, ‘But I hear it as like a rock-rap song, so it needs a really good rapper.’
And they were like, ‘Well, who do you think?’ And I was l going through the names and I actually thought of Mike Patton. He was the one that I wanted first, and I’m a fan of his work, but he’s a little bit tied to, you know, those things that I…
When interrupted by Kennedy, who enquired who Patton is, and whether there was “smoke” around Patton, Feldman replied like this.
Not smoke. Just the the stuff you’re talking about, the cult stuff. Yeah. So, it looked a little dark. So, I was like, I don’t think that’s the best marriage. But I like his work, but just not his message, maybe. So, anyway, so I thought, well, that might be a little dark. So, then I was like, ‘Who’s a great rapper that’s not going to go dark on me? Oh, I know, Fred!’
So, I called Fred and I said, ‘I got this new jam. What do you think?’ And he’s like, ‘Oh, I don’t know. Let’s uh let’s hear it.’ So, I sent it to him. He’s like, ‘Dude, that’s badass.’ I was like, ‘All right, you want to do it?’ He’s like, ‘Yeah, let’s do it.’ I was like, ‘All right.’
Although Feldman did not go into detail about his specific “cult” worries with Patton, Feldman and Kennedy discussed satanic cults, especially in Hollywood, shortly before the aforementioned portion of the conversation. Feldman continued by saying he had heard that members of the dark side of Hollywood who practise Satanism are “worshipping an ancient deity named Baal.”
The two then delved deeper into conspiracy theories concerning NASA and Satanism, the depiction of US President George Washington as a “satanic figure” in a painting in the US “Congress building,” and other topics. They continued by saying that while some rock gods do practise Satanism, many use Satanic images for show. Ozzy Osbourne and other others were excluded by the two, though. Notably, Feldman has previously been accused of acting in a cult-like manner.