BURNS -- As night faded into the 29th day of armed standoff at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, the remaining four holdouts discussed their exit strategy and talked chow in live videos posted to Youtube.

Four voices are heard in the video, which appears to have been filmed in the dark of night.

The remaining occupiers are: David Fry, 27, of Blanchester, Ohio; Sandy Anderson, 48, of Idaho; her husband, Sean Anderson, 47; and Jeff Banta, 46, of Elko, Nevada.

A man can be heard talking on the phone in the background while Fry and another man discuss food.

"I was eating your Pop-Tarts," the man tells Fry.

"That's totally fine," Fry responds.

In the background, the man on the phone talks with someone he later identifies as a spokeswoman for Nevada Assemblywoman Michele Fiore. He tells her he doesn't plan to submit to arrest and indicates the four holdouts need to "get people here" to defend them.

"She was saying she could do more if I'm alive than dead," he later tells his companions when they ask what the two discussed.

"Get the governor to pardon us!" one responds.

On Friday, the occupiers upped the ante on their demands to the FBI. They won't leave the refuge 30 miles south of Burns, they said, unless they first secure pardons for everyone involved in the occupation - not just themselves.

Previously, the four had said they would leave the refuge if federal authorities promised them they would not be charged with crimes.

Meanwhile, Ammon Bundy, a key leader in the refuge takeover who was arrested Tuesday along with four others in a traffic stop that left one dead, continued his quest to end the standoff he started.

A video of a phone call that Bundy hoped to pass on to the occupiers was posted on YouTube. In it he speaks into a pink cellphone held by his wife, Lisa Bundy.

A man offscreen who describes himself as "Mike" -- possibly Bundy's lawyer, Mike Arnold - directs him through the call, telling him someone from the media has agreed to send the voicemail to the refuge occupiers via text message.

"This could be made public," he warns Bundy, adding "just assume that your neck is sticking out."

Bundy then launches into a short, succinct plea to his former co-occupiers.

"This was never meant to be an armed standoff," he told them. "We only came to expose abuse and educate people about their rights as protected by the Constitution of the United States. Please do not make this something it was never meant to be. Go home to your families."

If the video has reached the occupiers, it doesn't seem to have swayed them.

"Let's go out alive or go out to heaven," a man says as the four occupiers gather in the dark, "and let them live in their slave world."

--Kelly House

khouse@oregonian.com

503-221-8178

@Kelly_M_House