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January 9, 2026 36 mins

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On today’s MKD, we cover several restaurant incidents, new alcohol guidelines, a cocktail ingredient that can cause your stomach to explode, and semen jewelry. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Death starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk Hi.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Everyone welcome The Mother Knows Death. We're going to talk
about a few accidents and deaths involving restaurants, the new
food pyramid in Doctor Oz's alcohol guidelines, including the misuse
of the word bluber kint. I hate that word. It's
just it's used in any other circumstance except for what

(00:41):
it is. A cocktail, ingredients used to make fancy drinks
that could cause your stomach to explode, and jewelry that
shows just how much you really love your man. All
that and more on today's episode. Lots of restaurant incidents
this week.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
Okay, first Adam mc donald's and employee was hospitalized after
their earbud fell into the deep fryer and then they
stuck their hand in to try to retrieve it. This
makes me what to crawl up and die just thinking
about how absolutely painful this must be.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
Yeah, and it's it's instinct though, right. I Mean, my
question is like, why are you allowed to have earbuds
in while you're working at McDonald's side note, like, how
are you paying attention to your surroundings and your coworkers,
and I can't stand the earbud thing. It's it's not
good for socialization, like if you're you know, I have

(01:36):
good memories of working at like Boston Market when I
was a kid. You know, it's like you make friends
with your coworkers and you have fun and like, you know,
it's just like you shouldn't be like when you're at work.
You should be working and focused on your work. But
that's a side note. I understand the instinct thing. Like
I dropped my when I was just in New Orleans,

(01:58):
I dropped my phone into toilet and like, I stuck
my hand right I don't, thank god, it was like
a clean public It looked clean at least it wasn't
like one of those completely skivach ones, but it was.
I stuck my hand right in because I was just like,
this thing can't be wet like this, like it's just
an instinct. And then the oil, Oh my god, I

(02:20):
can't imagine. Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Even the other day, I was just cooking bacon and like,
like truly, the most Midish school splash hit my arm
and it hurt so bad. I can't imagine sticking your
whole hand in there.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
Yeah, I mean, if it was really in there for
enough time, I mean, this person could possibly require skin grafts,
like it could be that bad. And on your hand,
especially just all of the strictures that you could get
from the contracted skin and everything. Oh my god, it

(02:56):
just sounds horrible and quite possibly will be dealing with
this for a long time.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
God, it's so horrible. All right. So then also at McDonald's,
this is not really adding up to me. I don't
know if it is for you. So they're saying that
this grandpa gets to the drive through and he approaches
the payment window and I thought he dropped his card
and was getting out to get it, but it doesn't
seem like that's what happened. They're saying he opened his

(03:22):
car door and partially got out to try to further
reach the payment window. His car wasn't in park, and
then something happened where the car moved, which pinned him
between the car door and the payment window, and he
ended up dying from the injuries. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
I mean, I feel like I've heard about this happening.
We might have even talked about it on the show.
I'm not sure, but it happened when a person, and
that's happened to me before too, Like you're going to
hand the credit card to somebody and they drop it
or you drop it, and you have to It's hard
because when you're in the drive through, you're not in park.

(04:02):
Typically your foot's on the brake, but and you're just
like open the door to reach out and don't realize
that like when you reach out all the way, you're
then taking your foot off the brake and then the
car starts to drive. So the same thing could have
happened with him. And if he felt like he was
too far away from the window his tires, he may

(04:22):
have already tried to turn his tires in to get
closer to the window and didn't get close enough. So
when he lifted his foot off of the brake, like
the car pinned him against the wall and he probably
I would assume that he died from like a positional
asphyxia where he wasn't able to contract his chest to

(04:45):
expand his lungs in order to breathe.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
Yeah, because I get I assumed it was the card thing,
But I guess, like some people, if you park too
far away, you might try to get out and stand it.

Speaker 2 (04:57):
Yeah, like if you're too far from the windows sometimes
you feel like you might not be able to reach
and and it's it's just something. It's just like, it's
just a really unfortunate accident. Like if his car was
in park, it would have been fine, you know what
I mean. It's just like, yeah, and if the guy's elderly,
like he might not be with it one hundred percent

(05:18):
and things like that. So it's just it's really terrible.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
Well, one of his kids had shared too, I think
on her social media account that his leg was amputated
a couple of years ago, so maybe he had difficulty
getting out of the car. I don't know if he
had a prosthetic on or something. I would assume he
had a prosthetic on, but I don't know. So it's
just really sad to think that this happened when you're
not it was like ten o'clock. That's another thing too,
because if it was.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
If it was his you know, could you imagine that
I'm sitting here and I'm like, what foot do I
drive with? It's just like, so isn't it weird when
stuff like that happens and you're just like, I just
can't even do it unless I'm in the car.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
Wait, did you see that video Lauren posted? I was
literally dying. It was like it was like a woman crying.
And she said, my husband went through my phone to
try to look for bad text messages, but he found
something worse. And then it was her calculator that said,
what's eleven minus three? That's great, And I'm like, oh

(06:17):
my god, I think this is all.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Yeah, it's like that. So it's your right foot. So
let's say, for example, his right foot was amputated right
like if he did, so he has a prosthetic. You,
I mean, you're you can't It might not connect with
your brain as much that your foot is on the
pedal because you can't really feel it anyway, you know

(06:44):
what I mean. Like not to say that he doesn't
know it's there, but when you're just quick and you're
not thinking, you're like a lot of times, lots of
things go on at one time and you're just not thinking,
and then all of a sudden, like it's just it's
a terrible thing. And by the time, like you know,
the McDonald's people are in there, there's a possibility that
there wasn't even because sometimes there's not even someone at

(07:06):
the window, so someone might not have noticed like at
that very second, ran outside and tried to fix the problem.
Like it could have been a couple of minutes before
someone was able to get him away. You know, if
nobody was in line, there's like a lot of different
things that could have happened.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
Yeah, and they were saying another employee tried to go
through the passenger side to try to help him out,
but it just like it just wasn't I mean, think
of how heavy a car is or yeah, you're not
in the right position. It's really difficult to move. So yeah,
that's a shame. It's so sad, all right. So then
this next story is from outback. So this guy is
suing outback, claiming that while he was using the handicapped toilet,
it suddenly shattered beneath him, living leaving him with serious injuries.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
All right, So what do you what do you think
about this? Like, I I mean, if you if you
go in a public bathroom and sit on a toilet,
you're not thinking that it's going to shatter beneath you
and porcelain. I have a couple posts in the gross
room with people that get caught by porcelain. I have
one in particular where a guy like woke up in

(08:09):
the morning and felt like he was gonna faint, and
he like he must have fainted and hit the toilet,
and the toilet broke when his body hit it, and
he was like bleed. He had like this huge incisional
wound from the porcelain. Like it there's there are stories
of people who get cut on you know, those ones
that were like the soap dishes that were built in Yeah,

(08:31):
like they could really hurt you.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Oh, I believe that one hundred percent. That was the
first thing I thought. I one hundred percent believe he
has serious injuries.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Because and like the specific quote that they used was
that he's lost an important bodily function and lost capacity
for enjoyment of life. Like I'm just assuming that penis
injury me some kind of penis injury, which is possible
because like he's naked, I mean bottoms down anyway going

(09:03):
to the bathroom on the toilet, so like his junk
was hanging there and exposed like if you know, it
could have got really crushed. I guess my first question
is obviously, like because the only way that they wouldn't
really be liable. Is like how heavy was this guy?
Was he? Because there are weight capacities to things and

(09:24):
if he was beyond that then then that could potentially
be his fault.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
So he's going after them saying it did not properly
secure the toilet to the floor. I mean there could
have also maybe been like a stress fracture in it
too that maybe started this whole thing. I do think
his lawsuit is kind of reasonable. He's only seeking fifty
thousand dollars, which I don't even think would probably cover

(09:49):
his medical bills for this.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
Yeah, I mean, like it just depends on what kind
of toilet was, because you know, the ones that just
go directly into the back of the wall, they are
kind of like hanging there, like they don't have the
weight capacity that one on the floor does. Yeah, so
if they just had the one that was in the wall,
and that was the ones they had. If you're a
person that's like five hundred pounds, like you should you

(10:16):
shouldn't use toilets like that.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
But is it the liability of the restaurant to say
that there is a weight capacity on those?

Speaker 2 (10:26):
I mean I don't, I don't know. There might be.
They always have tags on the back.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
I mean, I don't know, so yeah, I mean I
guess that's a big factor and all that.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
I mean, yeah, I guess it is. I feel like it,
like I guess, I guess it is. I would say
it probably is, I would say, because they do that
with elevators, like the weight that like, don't get on
here if you weigh this much, because you know this,
this elevator could only hold this much. Don't get on
here if you're exceeding the weight kind of thing.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
I'm surprised they would even allow those like floating toilets
that have weight capacities like that, especially in the United
States where obesity is more prevalent, because I like, you
cannot deny somebody in a public space like a restaurant
like that, the use of a toilet, right. And I
even remember at the restaurant I worked at, like we
had a men's room which just had a urinal and

(11:20):
a sink, and then we had a quote unquote women's
room upstairs, and then our other two bathrooms were downstairs
that were full for both genders. And we got a
violation because they were like, you have to have a
handicap accessible bathroom. Upstairs for everybody. It can't just be
marked a women's room.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
Yeah, so, I mean, I don't know, it just depends,
like you're probably what you're saying is probably right, Like
it could just be that there was a lot, you know,
if there was multiple people that were exceed or going
high on the weight. I mean, it could have had
fractures like something. Something happened. Obviously this happened. So I

(12:04):
feel like in general, like I'm just trying to think
of how the how a defense lawyer would like fight
the opposite way and try to blame it on the person.
But I mean, really, like you're saying, there should probably
be some kind of a thing that says like warding
if you weigh this much, don't sit on this.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
I don't think I've ever seen that. Me neither.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
And that's just how I can see them going after
the restaurant for being liable. But at the same time,
I mean, if they could prove the toilet wasn't properly
secured down and it maybe had a fracture that wasn't
taking care of him was a dre I don't know
how they're going to prove that, but could.

Speaker 2 (12:41):
You imagine, like, seriously, how embarrassing that is for this guy.
Just like imagine going to the bathroom and getting injured
to that point, like and then either someone hearing it
or someone coming in and finding you like that, and
you're half naked and like have you're sitting in a toilet,

(13:02):
maybe you've already taken a shit. It's all over the
place right, Like, it's terrible.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
It sounds absolutely horrific, And I imagine his injuries were
quite severe, seeing like I know from what we've seen
in the grocerroom obviously what porcelain could do to people.
But just think of the texture of it. How horrible
that would be if it cut you like that upon fource?

Speaker 2 (13:22):
Yeah, yeah really And on top of that, all of
the dirty bacteria and everything that's all over a toilet
of multiple different people going into those open wounds like that. Ough,
no thanks.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
This episode is brought to you by the grocer room guys.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
This week we had some really interesting cases. We had
one of a terrible crime that happened on New Year's Eve,
which I don't I guess it's technically a crime, but
also kind of an accident. It's like one of those
weird areas, we finished up our high profile death dis
section on Brian Walsh and the death of his wife

(14:14):
Annah Walsh, and that's the one that where we really
get into the forensics of the case. I do have
a really good post that's going to be going up
this week that I am still waiting for additional photos,
but I can't wait to share it with you because
it's pretty it's pretty out there. And last Forensic Friday,
we covered the somber anniversary of John Benet Ramsey's death

(14:36):
the day after Christmas. So all that and more in
the Gross Room. Check that out.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Head over to the groscroom dot com now to sign up.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
All right, so this week a new food pyramid was released,
which I have to say that I'm pretty happy that
that happened because the food pyramid when I was a
kid was is probably the reason that a lot of
us have like weight problems now.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Well, I think a lot of people still live by
it too, where they think like white bread is super healthy.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
It's just so it's so crazy that that ever happened.
I just remember, though, like I specifically remember learning about
it and just being like, oh, like the bottom of
the pyramid had the most bread and grains, and I
just remember, like it's hard to get out of that
mentality to just be like yeah, like if I just

(15:35):
eat a bunch of rice and rolls, like I'm getting
like the most nutritious food of the day. Like who
ever thought that was good? I don't know, it's kind
of weird. It's just but like you have this whole
entire generation of people that you taught the best thing
for them to eat all day was carbs. It's just

(15:56):
like hard to rewire your your entire brain on that.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
But you think he is sponsored by Big Bread.

Speaker 2 (16:02):
They really just really probably like freaking straight up Wanderbread
was like yo here, It's just like I don't know.
Sometimes you just gotta wonder, like what the hell. So anyway,
it is what it is, and they changed it. So
now they changed a little bit of the recommendations too
when it comes to alcohol. So what was it?

Speaker 1 (16:25):
So yeah, doctor Oz is talking about the new federal
guidelines for alcohol conception, and he's saying that the main
takeaway should be don't consume it for breakfast, which obviously.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
I think, yeah, and that's a little loose. I mean,
you know, I have a thing. It's the same thing
that I have with weed. When it's just like when
you tell people, like everyone, most people know what he means,
Like you don't need to you don't need to have
a glass of vocal on your night table and wake
up to it and stuff. But like if you want

(16:59):
to have asses of wine, this is what he's saying.
But like the interpretation of that from people is a
lot different than what he's saying for some people. Right,
So it's the same with the weed and everything else.
It's like when you tell the population that things are
healthy and okay, then they take it, they interpret it
however they want to interpret it, and whatever. It doesn't

(17:22):
matter because like does it really matter what they say.
People are going to do what they're gonna do anyway.
I just have a problem with his phrase that alcohol
is a social lubricant that brings people together. It's just
like there's no other word they could have used in
the English language besides that it just sounds gross. I

(17:44):
just I don't know, it just is so gross and listen,
like I do. I do agree with it to a
certain extent, though, because a lot, like I know a
lot of people that like can't even have a conversation
if they don't have a drink, And it's not good
for people to be isolated it either, if they feel
like they can't socialize with people.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
Yeah, I mean, I think the good point he's trying
to say is like you don't need to abstain from
having it, but you should definitely consider having it in moderation.
And I feel like we've been seeing all these reports
coming out that Gen Z is not drinking as much,
like a like even comparative levels to what Millennials, boomers

(18:26):
and Gen X is drinking. So I do think that's fascinating.
But I heard on another show them talking about like
maybe they're not drinking as much because they're not going
out because the phones have made them so socially debilitated
that they just don't even care to go out and
interact with other people. And that's kind of a problem too.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
Speaking of the Frankenstein book that I read, like, I
just couldn't help but think about Zuckerberg the entire time
I was reading it, just like this monster that this
guy has created. It's not it's like I'm not even
it's just and I guess the phones are like Apple too,
Like there's a lot of people complicit, but it's just like, really,

(19:09):
it's just so so so bad for everything. I hope it.
I hope it changes at some point, honestly, Like I
just hope that everybody's because I was saying this to
Gabe and like, I hope that I makes sense when
I say this, Every single video now that I watch,
I can't even tell. I can't tell if it's Ai

(19:31):
sometimes not everyone. So I told him, like even on
my website in the grosser room, like unless I could
totally confirm that this video came from a place, I
don't even want to post it anymore because I don't
even know if it's real or fake anymore. And within
the next couple of years, AI is only going to
get better, right to the point where like we're not

(19:51):
going to be able to tell. It's just going to
be that good. Yeah, And then you're like, what what's
going to be the point of of like enjoying a
video if you don't even know if it ever really happened,
you know what I mean? Like there's and then like
I'm hoping that it gets to the point where people

(20:11):
are like I don't even care to like watch these
TikTok videos anymore because they're all fake and then we
like go back completely to like square one.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
This is why I've said it a hundred times. Everybody
should watch Mountainhead.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Like people people survived in the eighteen hundreds without cameras
and without video, and they socialized and they they they survived.
They were fine. They had friendships, they had family, they
had relationships, Like it could it could? Is it possible
that it just goes so far up that it goes

(20:44):
back down again? Because people are just like, cause I
think about that, like, are you really I understand that
actors and actresses are worried to a I could take over,
which one hundred percent could happen, but like, do you
really want to watch something that didn't even really happen?
It really just weird.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
It just really came though, Like I understand, like it
maybe could work its way up to that, but where
we are right now, I don't even see it as
a threat. Has anybody ever used these things? They're dumb,
like they don't know anything that people's eyeballs are pointing
five hundred different ways.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
Yeah, but that's a matter of time. It's just a
matter of time. Like I understand that it's primitive right now,
but like it's a matter of time. I human. I
know what I didn't include on the stories today, which
I was going to talk about in the grosser room,
was I was going to see if I could pull
it up because it just came up like moments before
we started recording, and it was about and we could

(21:37):
still talk about it in the gross room as well,
but it said something about Utah is now approving that
like a chat GPTAI model can prescribe drugs to people
who are on medications that they're taking on a regular basis.

(21:58):
And I and read the exact extent of the article
and everything like that, but I really, I really would
like to know how doctors feel about that and pharmacists
feel about that, and I understand that that that eventually
could help with the process of the overwhelmed, like CBS

(22:21):
near us is a freaking nightmare because of the way
you get your medications and everything. Like maybe it could
be useful, but when when's it going to be a
point where they're just like, you know what, we don't
even need this human here for this at all, because
like you could just put in your symptoms and get
this this computer to give you medication and we can

(22:41):
just completely bypass the human.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
I just don't understand how that's gonna be possible. Like
even example, yesterday, like my like dose of baby aspirin
is like something weird, like where I have to cut
the pill right, and to make it easier for me,
they change it to a chewable tablet. So I renewed
it from being a pill to the chewabol tablet, and
when I went to pick it up, it was like
I got twenty five questions. What do you need this for?

(23:06):
Are you currently pregnant? You have preclamscap And.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
I'm like that that's all stuff that's sold over the counter,
Like this is all stuff that can be fixed that
can a computer can figure out. But why did you
have to talk to the person? Like the point I'm
making though, is I had to talk to the pharmacist
to answer these questions. So this is gonna get worse
if it's prescribing the incorrect drugs for people and it's
flying in the system. And like one could say that,

(23:32):
one could say that human error is definitely like this
is the same thing we could talk about with psychology.
For example, what I went to school for in the beginning, Like,
they have computers that could read pap smears now, right,
and the rate of them getting it wrong is just
so much less than humans getting it wrong. So although

(23:56):
I was just kind of like, I don't think this
is a good idea. I don't know if it trusts
it it needs human eye to pick it up, it's like, actually,
like the studies are shown that the computer's picking it
up better.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
I mean, so it's like that they've tested it and
it's working efficiently and people aren't getting harmed, and like
I will trust it, but like, but but it's.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
Just weird because then when you take the human out
of everything, it's just it's just like you could see
it happening in this short amount of time. Just the
difference in people socializing in this and that it's just
like it's it's not it's not good for us that
are that are animals that are need to socialize. So,

(24:34):
getting back to this doctor Oz thing, like I understand
what you're saying, and I've also agree with you that
I've heard a lot of people my age especially that
are like I don't drink anymore, which I personally think
is awesome. Because I you know, I think it's terrible
for you. I've seen the effects that it has only
human body. I think it's terrible for you. And also
I think it's very weird that you when you go,

(24:55):
like I just went to Disney to have fun with
my family, right, Like why would I get drunk? Like
why would I want to not be like your experience?

Speaker 1 (25:04):
People want to be drunk there?

Speaker 2 (25:05):
No I know, but but like why like why don't
you want to just feel it? Like why are you
numbing yourself to feel it in an altered state of reality?

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Because drinking is a day of fun for some people,
whereas you're just satisfied going to the park, But like
that's part of their whole experience, Like why did you
need to eat a Mickey mousepignet when you were there?
It's the same as why did somebody need to get
a beer? Like it's just part of your experience versus
somebody else's. But I I, like, I don't really drink either,

(25:35):
so like I'm down for this obviously, but like I
do want to have a martini.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Once in a while.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
And I think the point the key here is just
like people are just doing everything in excess these days
and not paying attention.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
Yeah, so I guess. I guess I didn't really realize
this that the old and I go back and forth
with this because I don't like I think alcohol is terrible,
but I also agree with what doctor Oz says where
he was pointing to these blue zones. Have you ever
heard of these blue zones? Uh? Like, I don't really

(26:11):
know any They're like areas. There are areas of the
world where people have like an exceedingly high level of
of living, like a longer life than the average lifespan
And in Okinawa, Japan, and in Sardinia and Italy like
and both of those populations they have people that just

(26:32):
live healthier lives and live into deep old age over
one hundred years old, right, and both of those populations
those people drink alcohol, so and and like, listen, that
could be said about everything like it what type of
alcohol are they drinking? Number one? How often are they
drinking it? And then genetics of course, because obviously the

(26:52):
genetics have a lot to do with it.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Well, that and how heavily processed is it? Because as
we know, with some food in Europe.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
Even though I got landered in a review for saying.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
They have higher standards in other countries of what they
put in the food.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Wait, what if someone say someone remember I.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Said gluten was like poisonous, and somebody was like, they
don't even know what they're talking about. Gluten is not poisonous,
And I'm like, no, I said, compared to other countries
it is.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
It's not poisonous, but it causes it. It definitely has
been documented to cause inflammation.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
So yeah, because like the point of trying to make
is in Europe, for example, they have way hired standards
of preservatives and chemicals are going into food, and they're
now thinking, like, all those things that are in food
over here is causing this influx in problems in younger
people that they're not seeing over there. So like it
could be something to do with that too.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
I think it's just has to do with our food pyramid.
I'm pretty sure. Like I know that people eat bread
in Italy and France and stuff, but like, are they
eating it as like their main food for thirty years?
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Are they eating the whole bag it every day?

Speaker 2 (28:04):
I don't know. So anyway, Wait, I wanted to say
one other thing about this, What the recommendations used to be.
I felt like I had this written down somewhere. It
used to be like, oh, women should have one drink
per day and like men could have two drinks per
day or something. It was like very weird, and I'm

(28:25):
just like, I don't necessarily think I agree that that
should be changed, because that's a weird way of wording it.
Like why are you telling people if you have one
drink a day it's okay? Because who drinks one drink
at once? And why should someone drink every day? It's
it's better to have like would you rather have wine
like once or twice a week and have three glasses

(28:46):
at a time rather than But also like who once
one a day? It's weird not all men and women
are equal like some if there's so like really skinny
smaller guys than me for sure. Yeah, yeah, I just
think that was a stupid recommend but I mean, like
it is. It is important though that alcohol like cause

(29:06):
it can cause a lot of problems with people, not
not even they could also cause social problems for sure,
but also can cause cancer and things like that and
heart disease. So it just needs to be when when
I guess when you say using moderation, Like, what does
that mean? People want to know for breakfast, don't Yeah?

Speaker 1 (29:28):
Okay. So also speaking of alcohol, if anybody's ever gone
to like a fancy bar restaurant, they sometimes offer cocktails
where it looks like this, like smoke is coming out
of the glass. But now doctors are saying that that
ingredient can make your stomach explode.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
Yeah, and explode is like kind of dramatic. But liquid nitrogen.
I feel like I've talked about this either on the
show before or on Instagram, Like I've been talking about
it for a while with those did you ever see
those drinks they sell on the boardwalk called Dragon's Breath?

Speaker 1 (29:58):
Yeah, because Lubert.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Yeah, because it's like for the little like the little
kids want it, and it's like a drink that's fogging. Right,
But the liquid nitrogen is the same liquid nitrogen that
they used to like burn off people's warts, right, Like
it causes a burn, but it's such an extreme freeze
that it could cause like frostbite or burn of the skin.

(30:21):
And when you ingest that, there's a chance that you
can burn your stomach lining as well and cause a perforation.
And they even cite this case, there's been a case
in a medical journal of an eighteen year old girl
that drank one of these drinks and went to the
hospital immediately because she experienced difficulty breathing and in intense

(30:44):
abdominal pain. And they saw that this not only did
it burn a hole through her stomach, it caused air.
So what happens is the air that's inside of the
stomach could then go along with the stomach contents, can
go into the abdominal cavity, can compress organ can eventually
lead to an infection. And this particular hole that was

(31:05):
made by this liquid nitrogen froze the stomach tissue so
much that it caused gangerine or killed it caused necrosis.
It killed the tissue around the hole. They weren't able
to sew up the hole. Then they had to take
out her entire stomach. That's forever. So now they're attaching
her esophagus to her small bell and she doesn't have

(31:27):
a stomach, and she's going to have to deal with
those digestive issues the rest of her life. She's eighteen
years old. Just to drink a drink that looks like
it has fog in it, I hate that kind of shit.
It's so upsetting.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
So I guess it's like who's liable for this then,
like are we even supposed to be using this or
there's just no regulations at all.

Speaker 2 (31:46):
I don't know they. I do know that they sell
it at the boardwalk, but for example, they do have
signs all over the place that are like because the
ones that they do at the boardwalk now are like,
I don't I can't even explain what it is. It's
it's like a blown it's almost like a blown up

(32:07):
cocoa puff or something like a puff cereal, like a
rice cereal. And they put them they put them in
this in a plastic cup and then they put the
liquid nitrogen at the bottom of the cup and when
you pull but even if you pull one from the top,
it's it's not that cold, and it's it's still you know,

(32:28):
the smoke's still coming out, and they just say, like,
don't ingest the liquid. It could cause burns. Like they
do have that at the boardwalk. It's written all over
the place like don't drink this liquid. If it's in
the liquid, don't drink it, like they it's all over
the place. But then they hand them the kids that
are five years old. Yeah, right, like so whatever, I mean,

(32:48):
I've had let the kids do it, and I just
sit there and watch them and make sure that they
don't like I'm watching them when they eat it. And
it's fine when it's higher up in the pile like that.
But yeah, like it could cause it could cause serious,
serious problems. So you just and and like, if you're
drinking an alcoholic drink, you're like, you're inebriating, you're not

(33:10):
thinking straight, like you're just not paying attention, and you
could drink that stuff that you're not supposed to drink.

Speaker 1 (33:16):
Yeah, it just seems stupid. All right, let's wrap up
with this disgusting story. So there's this company that makes
memorial jewelry that they put like ashes or hair in,
for example, And now for Valentine's Day, they're trying to
sell jewelry where you could put your.

Speaker 2 (33:31):
Man's semen in. Yeah, it's a little vile around your neck,
a little heart and what was what was the quote
on the video?

Speaker 1 (33:43):
It's a POV he's yours because you're wearing his DNA.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
Yeah, and it shows The videos are really gross because
it shows a person that has semen all over their
fingers and like spreading their fingers apart, and you could
see it all over the person's hand. And then another
one of the videos shows a guy coming out of
the bathroom with like a specimen coped filled with semen

(34:08):
and then they get a little syringe and pick up
the semen and put it in this vial around this
this woman's neck.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
This is so I mean, listen, I really think bodily.

Speaker 2 (34:19):
I mean, it's good marketing. You have to give you
have to give them credit. It's like it's going to
get views. It is good marketing, but it is it
is gross, Like come on, it.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
Is and it's not like you know, sometimes they'll make
this jewelry where it's not so obvious what's in it.
Like it's obvious there's like a gross like thick fluid.

Speaker 2 (34:37):
Yeah, like they make like jewelry like diamonds with people's
ashes and breast milk and stuff like that. But it
looks it looks like a like a normal ring, like
it doesn't have anything. No, this is just like it's
semen in a bottle around someone's neck. There's no it's
a joke. There's there's no mistaking it it could be

(34:58):
like you know what I always said, looks a lot
like that is like set a phill like the ew
could be that. So I hope it is for the
ad purposes and it's not real, But yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
It's pretty gross.

Speaker 2 (35:11):
I want to know what you guys have to think.
What you guys think about that? Would you wear your
man's semen in a necklace around your neck?

Speaker 1 (35:18):
All right, guys, Well, we hope you have a good weekend.
Please head over to our Apple or Spotify leave us
or if you subscribe to our YouTube channel, and as always,
if you have comments or shortage for us, please submit
them to stories at motherdosdeath dot com.

Speaker 2 (35:29):
Bye, have a good weekend. Thank you for listening to
Mother nos Death. As a reminder, my training is as
a pathologists assistant. I have a master's level education and
specialize in anatomy and pathology education. I am not a
doctor and I have not diagnosed or treated anyone dead

(35:52):
or alive without the assistance of a licensed medical doctor.
This show, my website, and social media account 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 is changing

(36:12):
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 Knows

(36:36):
Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or anywhere you get podcasts.
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