Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Dad starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Everyone welcome The Mother Knows Death. On today's episode, we're
going to talk about Tim Gunn of Project Runways shocking
confession he made this week that he's been celibate for
forty years. Then we have a couple of disturbing true
crime stories. The first involves a bully who killed a
twelve year old with a metal water bottle, and the
second is a man who was caught on video poisoning
(00:43):
his roommates with insect repellent. Then we'll finish up with
some unusual poop stories. All that and more on today's episode,
Tim Gunn, I Love Tim Gunn, Me too. He recently
went on Chelsea Handler's podcast and revealed that he's been
celibate for over forty years. Yeah, so apparently this happens
to people sometimes, like they're in a relationship that with
(01:06):
like who they think is the love of their life,
and they get seriously burned and then they just like
never date again or anything. And I guess in this
particular situation, he said that the guy that he was
with that he really really loved had cheated on him
and and apparently had admitted like I've been sleeping with everyone,
(01:26):
And it was in the.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Height of.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
AIDS, the AIDS crisis, and he just was like so
scared and so hurt and so burned by this guy
that he just anytime he ever tried to have a
relationship again, he just wasn't able to do it. So
he just hasn't had sex in forty years.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
It's kind of crazy because I did the math, and
he's seventy two, and he said for forty three years
he's been celibate, So that means he hasn't had sex
since he was twenty nine, which is really young to
make that decision. But I mean he said, quote the
self pity then turned into complete unbridled anger because I
thought he may have given me a death sentence relating
to the AIDS crisis. And then afterwards he got tested
regularly for HIV every six months for ten years and
(02:08):
the results were always negative. But I think that just
total broken trust just ruined any future relationship for him.
I mean, he was with this guy for nine years.
It's a really long time to be with somebody.
Speaker 1 (02:20):
Yeah, and back then, HIV was a dense sentence like
it would if there was no treatment for it, and
then it would eventually turn into AIDS and then you
would die from it. I mean Freddie Mercury died from it, right, Yeah,
So it's it's and like if being a gay man
back then and just like looking at someone like Freddy
(02:40):
Mercury going down, you would be like, well, if he
can't get treatment and he's dying from it, everyone's going
to die from it. It's freaking scary, especially when it
wasn't your fault. It was like someone else induced that
onto you. So and I'm sure so many people could
speak about that, getting some kind of sexually transmitted infection
that might not be as bad as HIV once was,
(03:04):
but just in general, like herpes, you have that for
the rest of your life, like something like that from
a spouse cheating.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
Well, yeah, especially because it's like it's not bad enough
that the person's cheating on you, but then on top
of it, they're just like not being safe and then
transferring it to you.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
That's not fair. Yeah, It's it's really messed up.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
So, I mean, now HIV is definitely not a death sentence,
and there's such good treatments for it that sometimes the
viral lord is so undetectable that you it wouldn't even
show up in a blood test and you wouldn't be
able to transmit it to anyone. But certainly I understand
his concern from back then. But God, I love him.
He's so lovable. It just makes me kind of sad
(03:41):
that he doesn't have someone to share that with.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
I know.
Speaker 2 (03:45):
I mean, it's like, who the hell is this person that.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
We need to run out of town? Now?
Speaker 1 (03:49):
Well, I know I was trying to figure out who
it was because he said that he had to work
with the person still afterwards.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Yeah, but I think it worked out because he was
living in DC at the time, and he had previously
been offered a job at Parson School of Design that
he had turned down to stay with this person, and
then the opportunity came back up, so he was like, well,
why am I going to sit around here in sol
CA all day when I could go to live in
New York. And then he was a professor there, and then,
as we know, he became the lovable mentor on Project Runway.
(04:15):
So I think everything worked out for him in the
grand scheme of his life. But this is sad as
long it makes me upset thinking about people being lonely,
you know, but maybe he's worked some other things out
in his life that that's not an issue. Yeah, but
kind of a shocking admission for sure. Yeah, it really is,
all right. LA police have opened a homicide investigation after
(04:36):
a twelve year old girl reportedly died after being struck
with a metal water bottle while trying to protect her
sister from a bully.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Yeah, this is really scary, obviously. I think that we
talked about a couple of years ago about a guy
that killed did he like kill his grandmam or something
with a Stanley cop It was something like that. We
have had multiple conversations about those cups because they're they
are heavy, and they hurt when they're empty.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
Especially when they're filled with liquid.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Oh yeah, they are. They could be used as a weapon,
and so this case kind of pisses me off for
multiple reasons obviously. Like I mean, if you're talking about
twelve year old kids fighting and stuff, a twelve year
old should certainly know better not to throw something that
heavy at a kid's head, right, Yeah, I mean that
(05:26):
they should certainly know better. I don't know if you
can really consider charging a twelve year old with homicide.
Like they're twelve years old. They just don't they don't think,
and they do dumb shit all the time. You know
what one thing I wanted to talk about, and I
didn't even look up the story yet, but I heard
today on the New Jersey News that there's this new
(05:48):
TikTok challenge that kids are doing that they're putting like
isopropeenol alcohol in their mouth and they're trying to literally
breathe fire. They set it on fire. And there's some
kid that just went to the hospital so he has
like inhalation burns as well, like like lifelong burns recovering
(06:11):
in a burn in it from something like this, right,
And and the guy on the radio is just like
like what, Like we're supposed to be that, Like the
kids are supposed to be more educated today than they
ever were, Like what is happening right now?
Speaker 3 (06:26):
They're stupider than they've ever been in their life? They are?
Speaker 1 (06:29):
And I mean it's like, but kids just do dumb shit, Okay,
So like and twelve years old is still like it's
an older kid, but it's still a kid that doesn't
one hundred percent have their frontal lobe developed, right, So
that's one part of the story. So the kid gets
brought to the emergency room and they release the kid
and they say like, oh, she's she's fine. So apparently
(06:53):
she got sent home initially and she was having all
these headaches and stuff for days, and then she went
back to the hospital and then it was like, oh,
she's having a brain bleed and all this stuff, and
then everything went down from there. Oh, we have to
give her surgery. So if you're having a brain bleed,
your brain could swell up and they have to take
portions of your skull off to let it kind of
(07:15):
like swell out before it could. In a theory, when
they take it off, your brain will swell and then
when the swelling goes down, they could put the pieces
of your skull cap back on. So it's a crany tomy,
it's called. So they they did that and like unfortunately
the damage was too bad and she ended up dying
from it. So two parts is like, you're pissed off
(07:36):
about the kid, but I'm also just kind of like,
there's absolutely no reason that a child had a significant
head injury. And I don't know if it's between the
hospital or the family or whatever, like having a headache
after having something like that happen and not being monitored, Like,
(07:57):
there's absolutely no reason that this kid is dead right now,
especially if she went to the hospital right after she
was injured.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Yeah, I mean, there just seems like there was negligence
on behalf of the hospital.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
And like, I guess as far as I can't say, well,
you can't say that because I don't know what happened,
like because if she did go to the hospital right afterwards,
if they did scan her, they might not a scanner
because they might not have thought there was an implication
for it. I would say that that was negligent, but
they might have scanned her and there might have been
nothing there, and they might have said, like, if she
(08:27):
develops any symptoms like nausea, throwing up, severe headache, bring
her right back. Like there was some kind of a
problem between either the hospital just being negligent or the
family being negligent. Something happened, because there shouldn't have been
days that she was going by complaining of a severe
headache and dying from something like this.
Speaker 2 (08:49):
Yeah, And I guess as far as the homicide investigation
is gonna go I mean to your point, like, how
are you gonna charge a twelve year old with throwing
a water bottle? But then I guess if they're saying
they're a legend, that this was a bullying incident, so
I guess they're gonna look into the history there and
see if it was purely just like a kid being
dumb or.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
The kid wasn't being dumb. I think the kid, the
kid was a bully and was trying to hurt her.
I don't think.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
I think that the kid definitely needs to get like
go to some kind of juvenile detention place or something
like that, if.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
That's what happened, and that's true, because that's what's alleged
right now.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
Yeah, well that's exactly. But they're saying that she was
a bully, she was protecting her sister, and she like
she maliciously was trying to hit the kid with it.
But so that's one thing. And and and even if
you die a week later after you have an injury
like that, like it's a homicide, if the person ends
up dying as a result, I just like that part
(09:50):
of it just upsets me and is annoying in itself.
But the whole thing with the with the hospital is
or the parent whatever it was in between, that this
kid just like had this internal brain bleed without being monitored.
I just don't understand how that happened.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Yeah, all right, this couple became mysteriously ill, and after
getting test done, the doctor told them their symptoms were
those of poisoning victims. So they happened to have this
hidden camera in their kitchen and when they looked through
the footage, they saw their roommates spraying all their food
with bug spray.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
I mean, geez, that's so scary, right, Yes, I wouldak
cameras in my house. I think there's all this stuff
that we talk about. I'm just kind of like I
feel like it might. I don't know, like I just
wear a house. But me like exactly for you, because
sometimes I don't feel good after you leave my house
and I think you're trying to kill me.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
I will not have this slender.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Sue me for five million dollars, all right, ten, Yeah,
that's just pack it on. I have like a thousand,
one hundred million in my bank accounts, so just like
take it all.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
You know, you don't feel good because on Friday I
was like, do you want to go to the bakery
and then we eat cookies? And then we go to
wahwah and get like all junk food, and that's what
we eat for lunch.
Speaker 3 (11:10):
That's why you don't feel good.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
I would have been fine with actual food, but you're pregnant,
so I have to deal with whatever you want to eat.
So I had cookies for lunch.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Excuse me, all right.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Anyway, so they put up so all right, So two
people going to the hospital saying that they're having similar
symptoms don't feel good, get blood work done, and both
have elevated liver enzymes and dysfunctional liver tests. So the
doctors are like, okay, this is I feel like if
(11:40):
it was one person going, it might have not has
been not been as easy to detect because you could
have elevated liver enzymes for anything. So it's like, if
one person goes and is like, I feeling nauseous, they're
not going to be like, you're getting poisoned. I'm sure.
I think it was that they both went at the
same time with the same symptoms and had the same
(12:01):
similar blood work that they were like, oh, this is
like you're being exposed to something. This is a little
weird because so when they figured out when they put
up the cameras and they figured out that they were
spraying raid insect repellent on the stuff. The guy was
wearing a gas mask and spraying their fruits and vegetables,
Like what a psycho that's like psychotic actually, And.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
My question is they were saying like they all had
their individual sections of the house, right, but they shared
the kitchen, so like did this guy not keep his
food in the kitchen? Because they were saying that the
footage was from like some time ago, it wasn't even immediate.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
I don't know, but I guess I guess the thing
is like they go to so they go to the
hospital and the guy's like, the doctor's just like you
might be getting pistoned, because I'm sure there was more
to the story, like just based upon going to the
hospital with nausea, confusion and elevated liver enzymes, that the
(13:01):
doctor wouldn't jump to the conclusion that a person was
getting poisoned.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
Well, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
If these people brought this up to the doctor, but
this room may also allegedly broke in their room, caught
up their clothes, stole medication, IDs, and more.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
Yeah, Like, I'm pretty sure they had to say to
the doctor like, listen, we think something's going on because
we started getting sick and this guy lives without There
was like more information get coming to the doctor. So
the doctor was probably like, well, with these symptoms, it's
possible that someone is putting something into your food. Cause
(13:37):
it's just so vague that I just don't think a
doctor would just come out and say that with because
for example, like this particular chemical that is inside of
the of the raid spray, right, that's on a typical
blood test, Like if I go to the hospital, that
won't show up. That would have to be a very
(13:58):
specific talks ecology test on for that specific chemical. The
only thing that's gonna come up is elevated liver enzymes,
which like people who drink alcohol that like it.
Speaker 3 (14:08):
It's just.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
It's so nonspecific. It has to be that they were
like saying that they thought they were living with someone
that was shady.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Yeah, I mean I don't understand, Like I don't understand
what the previous defenses why they couldn't kick this person out.
I guess it's kind of hard to kick somebody out
of your house. But like, and you've never really lived
with a roommate except me, who's the perfect roommate, right,
So like otherwise, I mean, you have given the kids now,
but you never had like a roommate that you didn't
(14:39):
really know. Like I'm thinking, just I'm really curious. I
want people to leave, like write as emails or leave
comments with their roommate stories. Like I remember a couple
of times, like when I was in college, Like one
time I was living with these people and like I
like went away for the weekend and I came back
and there was like dog hair all in my bed
and I was like, what they did not all know
(15:02):
is this? And like they were like, oh yeah, like
our friends slept here with their dog in your bed.
And I'm like, no, nobody goes in my room.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
I don't even understand what that.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
Was, Okay, And then I and then they were just
like stealing like my tampons and like stuff out of
my room. So I had to start saying booby traps
every time I left to see if my door got
opened or not.
Speaker 3 (15:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
I wouldn't like I would not be into that, but
some people like for whatever reason they have to do it,
and it's just scary because especially if you're with somebody
I don't know, Like I feel like if you're living
with someone, like you don't want to mess with someone
in that situation because they could really like mess with
you when they're in your personal items.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
Well, then I had a roommate who faked a pregnancy
and said she didn't have rent money because she had
to get an abortion and totally made it up and
then was coming in the house and stealing stuff too,
And I mean that was really hard to get her
out of that house, but she kind of left willingly,
thank God. But like, these these are not even like
big problems, like think about things like this or other
issues people have. So I'm just curious what our listeners
(16:03):
have gone through. I am their roommates, because.
Speaker 3 (16:06):
People are freaks.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
Why can't we disrespect each other's faces and like live together.
Speaker 3 (16:11):
It's so weird? But also what's weird?
Speaker 2 (16:14):
So they said authorities responded to the home, found the
room barricaded inside, resulting in an hour's long standoff, and
then he got charged with the misdemeanor and got released.
Don't you think this would be considered like attempted murder.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
Well, this is the thing though, like they have to
prove that. So, like I was saying, they're gonna have
to take their blood and see if they could do
a toxicology test to prove that that exact chemical that
they see in that video is in their system and
can correlate it with the symptoms that they're having. I mean,
(16:49):
I would think that just spraying someone else's food should
be able to get you into trouble, But to act
like that would be like an attempted murder situation, Like
the need to prove that with the toxicology.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
But what if the guy is saying, like I just
thought there was cockroaches and that was just spraying the count.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
It just so happened to have a gas mask in
my house.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
It's like that idiot driver that said she was spraying
a pepper spray on a spider, but she sprayed it all. Yeah,
that was people's order and they were like, yeah, it's
like cold outside, there's not spins outside, idiot whatever. This
(17:32):
episode is brought to you by the grocer Room.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
Guys.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Don't forget every single week in the grocer Room, we
have an additional episode that is mother Knows Death. Ish,
it's not exactly set up like this.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
We talk about a.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Lot of stories though sometimes we have like way more
stories and we have an a normal episode of Mother
Knows Death, but we go over them quick. A lot
of it is so it is a YouTube live, so
it has audio and video of it is us showing
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(18:08):
And we go over medical cases of course that are
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this week, for sure, are going to make it on there.
(18:29):
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which is the best part in comment. So check that
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Speaker 2 (18:40):
Head over to the Grossroom dot com now to sign up.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
All right, this is really important thing for us to
discuss poopgasms.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
All right, So somebody on x posted a screenshot from
Reddit of a person asking if their poop could possibly
be hitting their G spot. They said, whenever I need
to take a poop and I'm busy on a game,
I will postpone the pooping by holding my leg under
my ass. This feels insanely good for some reason, and
I don't know why I get pleasure from holding in poop.
(19:10):
Is the poop being held at my prostate making it
feel good?
Speaker 3 (19:13):
Or am I just weird? What are your thoughts?
Speaker 1 (19:17):
I think that it's possible that it is making it
feel good. I mean, men have the prostate and we
know that that's like their internal G spot, so to speak.
So I think that it's totally possible. I mean, if
it's poop or it's a penis, or it's a dildout,
like they all are pushing on the same area, right,
so I would think that it is doing that. It's
(19:39):
funny because I found this. I was just like looking
up this article to see if other people were talking
about this, because apparently it's a thing. So there was
this website. This was back from twenty fourteen, a website
called straight dot com.
Speaker 3 (19:57):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
Exactly what it was, but the title was poop induced
orgasms are more common than you think, And this woman
on there was saying that after she pooped, she would
pull up her pants and the crotch would press against
her volva and it would make her have like a
mini orgasm. And she said that it was definitely only
after she pooped, so it's happening to men and women,
(20:21):
and like, yeah, it's the same exact thing, like the
rectum is filling up, and it just depends on how
your nerves are organized down there and like where your
pleasure centers are. But it's totally possible, Yes, do whatever
I can. I just this reddit, this reddit thread, though,
I'm thinking of like a grown adult like sitting on
(20:41):
the floor playing video games, like sitting on his like
feet to hold in.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
His Like I'm just like, what, just don't admit what
you do in private.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
You know, there's just some things that well, the name
of wait, I think I wrote down the reddit thread
is called no Stupid Question Questions, which I kind of
love that. I kind of want to go on there
and see what the other stupid questions are because that
one was pretty good, So maybe we'll come back with
some next week.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
My personal favorite, and we've had a couple stories about
it on here, is am I the asshole.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
Oh, yeah, that one's good. That one's really good, because
sometimes you read it and you're just like no, like
you definitely are or you definitely aren't.
Speaker 3 (21:25):
So yeah, totally.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
And speaking of poop free, solo climber Alex Conald is
revealing what he has to do if he has to
poop during a climb. That was kind of an amazing
I don't know who's do you know whose podcast he
was on. He was on some podcast and the guy
I saw a clip from it, and the guy just asked.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Him, like, well, what do you do when you have
to poop? And it's like something like I never even
thought of actually, because he's up there like all day,
climbing up the side of a mountain like this or
a building. I mean, the building was quick, pretty quick.
I watched the whole entire thing on TV Live.
Speaker 3 (22:00):
Under an hour and a half.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
But but some of these climbs that he does are
are for multiple hours a day. So he was saying
that there's been times where he would just hang off
of the side of the cliff and just like pull
down his pants just enough and like poop right there,
like hanging off the side of a cliff.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
But not if another climber is below.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
Who yeah, could I mean think about that? Like, I
know that they prepare themselves so they don't eat a
lot beforehand, and you know, make sure you're empty your
bowls beforehand. But like sometimes like what if you had
some kind of virus and all of a sudden it
kicked in and you had like massive diarrhea or something like.
I'm sure something like that has happened.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
I just can't fathom doing it. But he said, when
it happens, it happens. It's better than pooping your pants.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
And so I guess that that. There's like when climbers
have like actual ropes and stuff, they have like things
attached to their body, like poop tubes.
Speaker 2 (22:59):
I know it's really gross, but what is appeeling about this?
You have to be outside a which we know I'm against,
and then be a have to poop in the air,
hanging like hundreds of feet above the ground. What if
you don't know a climber has started on the bottom
because you're so high.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
Up, and then you poop on their head.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Anyway, there's like flying turds coming down at you. We
did talk about that though, a couple of years ago
on this show about Mount Everest, how they had such
a big poop problem, because you never really think like, oh, yeah,
people have to poop up there too. Remember that there
was like they were saying that there were like tons
and tons, like actual tons of poop up there from
people pooping.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
And there's also just like dead deadies of dead, right,
they can't recover them. Yeah, it doesn't sound pleasure. I
don't understand the appeal of it at all.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
I think that I could see the appeal, like if
there's if there's something that only a handful of people
have ever done in the history of ever, Like I
see what the appeal is to want to do that.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
Do you think he could free solo amount Everest?
Speaker 1 (24:01):
Of course he could do anything. He's like the strongest
athlete in the world as far as I'm concerned. Yeah,
he's kind of a weirdo, but I think he's like
an exceptional human being, Like he really is. He's like
a specimen of a human.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
The strength that he has is and you look at
him and you like, if you just saw that guy,
you wouldn't be like, oh, this guy is like the
strong one of the strongest people in the world. I
mean he is, he's like superhuman. He just looks like
like hiking nerd.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Right, Yeah, you don't think about his ability, which is
really incredible at the end of the day.
Speaker 3 (24:36):
Yeah, he's he's.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
Really an incredible person.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
All right, guys, Well, we hope he loved that. To
wrap up the week, some fresh poops.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
Even see everybody poops, it's it's it's a good thing,
you know how they say, like every you know, even
famous people put their pants on one leg at a
time or something like that. It's just like I had
Alex Alex poops.
Speaker 3 (24:59):
I hope somebody gets me that book. That's a good
kid's book. Everyone poops.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
Yeah, it is a good one.
Speaker 2 (25:05):
Yeah, all right, put it out there so maybe somebody.
Speaker 3 (25:08):
Will do it.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Oh, you're gonna get twenty copies of it.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
I know. This is why, like we talked about this,
like I kind of don't like the concept of like
don't bring a card, bring a book to the shower,
right because it's like, first of all, a card can
be like two to five dollars. A book is like
ten to twenty dollars. It's just like dick to ask
people to do anti card too.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
Yeah, life, it's really good, like a really good one.
But like if you're just going to like Target to
get a card I've read, I just get a piece
of paper and fold it in half and like, oh
it's from me, Like why do you need a card?
Speaker 2 (25:42):
I started, why have a cricket? So like I started
just printing out gift tags and tying them on the bag.
Nobody wants the card.
Speaker 3 (25:51):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
Sometimes a card could be really good if it's like
very clever and funny, but usually you have to order
them online or something like they don't have them at
the store.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
If it's a good card, or get it or me
and Ricky write cards to each other for like Valentine's
Day or anniversary and stuff like stuff like that that
I keep aside, but like otherwise I.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
Just don't want a random card.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
And then the book thing is like not only is
it like an expensive add on to already give somebody
else to get you, but then people like write in
the book from whoever bought it, and then you have
five of the same book, and then because people wrote
in them, you can't carid of the extra copies.
Speaker 3 (26:28):
It's like such a weird concept.
Speaker 1 (26:31):
Yeah, I actually I just thought that I have in
the basement, like a whole entire bag full of books,
like they're old books. Okay, I'll get rid of.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
I'll take them if you aren't keeping on or holding on.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
I am holding on with them for sentimental reasons.
Speaker 3 (26:45):
But you could have them and then give them back.
Make sure you write in all of them. Okay, guys.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
Our event at the Center for Forensic Science Research and
Education is coming up on April tenth and eleventh.
Speaker 3 (26:58):
Don't forget.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
It is going to be our our last show, not forever,
but for a while because of the baby, So definitely
don't want to miss out on that. It's in Horsham, Pennsylvania,
which is right outside of Philly, and if you are
a grocery member, you're gonna get a pretty hefty discount.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
And it's it's a good place. It's a really awesome place,
and you get to tour the center, which is really
cool to see what's going on really behind the scenes
with forensics and the research, and you could just it's
really good because you could just pull up in your car.
It's not like going to the city and having a
fine spot. It's right near the highway, like it's easy
to get.
Speaker 2 (27:32):
To Yeah, it's pretty ideal all around, so please head
over to Appler, Spotify, leave us a five star review,
subscribe to our YouTube channel, and if you have stories
for us, please submit them to stories at Mothernosdeath dot com.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Have a good weekend, guys. Thank you for listening to
Mother nos Death. As a reminder, my training is as
a pathologist assistant. I have a master's level education and
specialize in and out gatomy and pathology education. I am
not a doctor and I have not diagnosed or treated
(28:05):
anyone dead or alive without the assistance of a licensed
medical doctor. This show, my website, and social media accounts
are designed to educate and inform people based on my
experience working in pathology, so they can make healthier decisions
regarding their life and well being. Always remember that science
(28:26):
is changing every day and the opinions expressed in this
episode are based on my knowledge of those subjects at
the time of publication. If you are having a medical problem,
have a medical question, or having a medical emergency, please
contact your physician or visit an urgent care center, emergency
room or hospital. Please rate, review, and subscribe to Mother
(28:50):
Knows Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or anywhere you get podcasts.
Thanks wo