Aleksa Vulović

This includes his participation in the 2020 "Australian" Utah monolith,[5] his journey to North Korea to get a haircut,[6] and entering a casino after appearing dressed in a hospital gown and IV drip during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Much of the content centered around myth-busting sensationalist claims in Australian media, while also using comedy to bring light to issues such as climate change, colonialism, police violence, and racism.

Together Vulović and Apollonov have collaborated on numerous projects, including mounting a machinegun onto a robotic dog, training wild lizards to hunt cockroaches in people's homes, using rockets to plant trees, sneaking into an arms dealing conference, and crafting a flamethrower from trash.

[6] During their investigation, neither Vulović nor Apollonov could find any evidence to support the claims of government-mandated hairstyles and came to the conclusion that these stories were most likely fake.

[21] In one attempt, Vulović tried entering the casino while dressed in hospital surgical garbs, dragging an IV drip stand on wheels, with a high forehead temperature.

When asked about possible legal repercussions over their comedic stunt, Vulović replied "There's no point suing us, we already lost all our savings on big wheel during our filming breaks.

"[7] Vulović and Apollonov were subsequently given life bans from entering casinos operated by Star Entertainment Group.

[8] On 6 March 2024, Vulović, Apollonov and Jordan Shanks attempted to enter Pine Gap, an American intelligence base near Alice Springs.

The video also featured an interview with Donna Mulhearn, a member of the Christians Against All Terrorism who attempted to enter the facility in 2006, and had accusations of CIA involvement in dismissal of Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam.