'Money Heist' (C)Netflix Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Print the Article Post a Comment Among the messages found on bullet casings left behind by conservative leader Charlie Kirk's alleged killer - Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old Utah native - were "Hey fascist! Catch!," "Notices bulge, OwO what's this?," and "Oh bella ciao, bella ciao, bella ciao ciao ciao." The first "speaks for itself," Utah Gov. Spencer Cox told reporters at a Friday press conference announcing Robinson's arrest. What the governor may not have known is that the directional arrows next to it are thought to refer to video game input codes - specifically for the Eagle 500kb Bomb in Helldivers 2. Related Stories TV TMZ Issues Mea Culpa After Laughter Is Heard on Air During Coverage of Charlie Kirk's Killing News Former MSNBC Analyst Matthew Dowd Says Channel "Reacted" to "Right Wing Media Mob" by Firing Him The other inscriptions further suggest Robinson was a gamer and deeply into online culture. "Notices bulge, OwO what's this?" is an online meme that began as a mockery of "furry" culture - people who wear animal costumes for sexual gratification - but has evolved into a shorthand for "cringe-y" behavior. As for "Bella Ciao," that's a phrase familiar to a much wider segment of the general population. It refers to a 19th-century protest song by Italian workers that was reborn as an anti-fascist anthem sung by the Nazi resistance during World War 2. In the 80 years since, it has been adopted more broadly as an anti-fascist rallying song. The tune was rowdily chanted at the European parliament last year in response to a visit from Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán, leading the house speaker to shout, "This is not Eurovision!" But the song is also quite catchy and has surfaced repeatedly in popular culture, employed everywhere from video games to sporting matches. Most notably, "Bella Ciao" sprung up several times in Netflix's Money Heist, the Spanish crime series that became a worldwide hit when it debuted in 2017. The song first appears in the series when characters the Professor (Sergio Marquina) and Berlin (Pedro Alonso) sing it quietly to each other, framing their planned crime as not merely a theft of hundreds of millions of Euros but an act of resistance against a system that has held them down. It then reappeared several times over the course of the series as a rallying cry for the show's merry band of thieves. The song's newfound popularity resulted in it hitting no. 1 on European music charts in 2018. THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up tour Ariana Grande's Eternal Sunshine Tour Sold Out in Minutes: Here's How Fans Can Still Snag Tickets Sphere Carin León Tapped as First Latin Act to Play the Sphere music Bad Bunny Says He Opted Out of U.S. Tour Dates Due to ICE Raid Concerns Spotify Spotify Is Finally Launching Lossless Audio For Premium Subscribers music K-pop Girl Group IVE Dishes on Favorite Tracks From New Album 'IVE Secret' D4vd Decomposing Body Found in Car Registered to Singer D4vd (Reports) tour Ariana Grande's Eternal Sunshine Tour Sold Out in Minutes: Here's How Fans Can Still Snag Tickets Sphere Carin León Tapped as First Latin Act to Play the Sphere music Bad Bunny Says He Opted Out of U.S. Tour Dates Due to ICE Raid Concerns Spotify Spotify Is Finally Launching Lossless Audio For Premium Subscribers music K-pop Girl Group IVE Dishes on Favorite Tracks From New Album 'IVE Secret' D4vd Decomposing Body Found in Car Registered to Singer D4vd (Reports)