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June 3, 2025 56 mins

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On today’s MKD, we kick off the week discussing the death of King of the Hill Actor, Jonathan Joss, volcanic eruptions, a man who died teaching his daughter how to drive, the terror attack in Boulder, an update on a girl who died after a dental procedure, weed found in popular candy, and hikers who did mushrooms and called 911. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Dad starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk Hi. Everyone,
welcome The Mother Knows Death. We have a great episode
for you today. We're going to be talking about the
voice actor from King of the Hill who is murdered

(00:28):
over the weekend. Tectonic plates moving around the globe. There
were two volcanic eruptions this weekend. A tragic story involving
a father who died giving his daughter driving lessons. The
terrorist attack coming out of Boulder, Colorado. An update on
a story we brought you about a child that died
during routine dental work. Weed. Yes, we'd found in a

(00:51):
popular kids candy and crazy things that happen when you're
on magic mushrooms. All that and more on today's episode.
Let's get started with this King of the Hill actor,
So Jonathan jos He was the voice of John Redcorn
on King of the Hill. So this story's kind of weird.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
He was murdered over the weekend, and then more information
started coming out about what happened. It seems that his
house burned down in February because he was using a
barbecue pit to heat the house. Because he claims the
city shut off his power and his home was deemed unsafe,
so the house burned down back in February, and then
he went to go check on the property on Sunday

(01:31):
to collect a victim's fire fun checked and then apparently
when he was there he saw the skeletal remains of
one of his pets in I guess the rubble from
the fire. Started freaking out, according to the neighbors, and
then got in a dispute with a guy two doors down,
which resulted in that guy driving over him and shooting him.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
There seems to be a little bit of drama in
this neighborhood, so this doesn't seem like it's the first
altercation that he's had with the neighbors. Now, what's really
interesting is that his husband is it or boyfriend. His
husband or boyfriend came out and wrote a post saying
that he was a victim of a hate crime and

(02:11):
it was a homophobic slurs and everything like that that
caused this guy to kill him. So now there's dispute
over what actually happened. Law enforcements saying they don't see
any indication of that. The husband is acting like they
were just standing there innocently having a meltdown because they
saw the skeleton of their dead dog, and then all

(02:32):
of a sudden, this guy just came up to them
and started saying homophobic slurs and shot him.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
So I think, like, let's I think two things could
be true. I mean, he could be having this volatile
ramp like all the neighbors are claiming, and the guy
that shot him also could have said something that wasn't.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
Yeah exactly, And I think that that's probably what happened.
And I don't know because we are going to be
talking about the Boulder thing obviously later and as far
as like what's considered a hate crime versus not. But
I don't think that this guy killed this guy just
because this guy was gay. I think it was because

(03:09):
they were fighting all the time and they had some
kind of rage towards each other.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
It seems, yeah, because I'm basing a lot of this
off of what the other witnesses said in the neighborhood,
and they were saying these rants happened all of the time,
and the police was called on him quite frequently before
the house burnt down, so it wasn't abnormal that he
would be acting in this way. Some of the people
were saying that he would go on his roof in
the middle of the night in bank pots and pans.

(03:33):
I mean, no, would pissed anybody off that you liked
her and like why yeah, like why? So I don't
know what was going on with this guy. I mean
he seemed kind of like all over the place. I
don't think a regular person just goes on the roof
and makes all that noise in the middle of the
night and soar.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Like has fires in their living room to heat their house.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
Yeah, I mean, because I was just thinking alone of
like the carbon monoxide risk with that, but then it
burned the house down.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
So a lot was going on in this story.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
And I mean the police as of today are really
adamant it's not a hate crime, but obviously, like this
only happened two days ago, so they really need to
continue on with their investigation. But I'd say, based on
what other witnesses are saying, most likely not.

Speaker 1 (04:14):
All right, let's talk about something really exciting. Volcanoes. I like,
this is one of my bucket list things to see
liquid hot magma coming out coming out of a volcano.
It's just is the coolest looking thing ever.

Speaker 2 (04:28):
Well, yesterday you were like add the volcano eruption into
the stories, and I was like, oh, I already did
a couple of days ago, and You're like, how did
you do it a couple of days ago? It just
happened because there was two volcanic eruptions in the last week.
So the first one was in Hawaii at the Killaway
volcano in erupted last Sunday for six hours. The fountains

(04:48):
reached over a thousand feet high. Isn't that crazy? Like
just seeing all the lava and all like the liquid
hot magmas you're saying shooting out at the top.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
So I just would love to I mean, seeing it
on video is just not going to do it for me.
I need to see it in real life. And the
one in Italy is the one that I wanted to
see in particular because friends of ours, our neighbors Rita
and Bill, we go out to dinner with them often,
and they're much older than us. They're in their seventies
their late seventies, and they are world travelers. And one

(05:20):
time Bill had told me that they he went on
a tour of this Mount Etna. He tried to bring
Rita and his friend's wife. They had to walk up
this giant thing, you know, to get there obviously, and
she was just like at the very bottom there was
this restaurant and her and her friend were like, you
know what, We're going to just sit here and drink
wine while you guys go on this volcano tour. And

(05:43):
she said it was just so pretty. She was just
sitting there drinking wine and seeing lava go over the edge,
which was so cool. And but Bill was telling us
and this was probably like back in the seventies when
he did this, when there were like no rules, you know,
but he was saying that there was this thin rope
that went around the edge of the crater and he
was able to just like look over and see this,

(06:04):
which is outrageous. So when you look at the footage
from the news, you could see that there were people
on an active tour when this happened, which is I
don't know, like if I had to die in any
kind of way, that would be like, I mean, I
don't want to be burned to death or breathe in
any of these gases that would potentially kill me, but
it would just be kind of a cool story.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Honestly, I disagree with you because I watched that Netflix
documentary about the people who were on a tour in
New Zealand at the Wakari volcano when it erupted and
a lot of people just like vaporized in the thin air,
and it seemed like an absolutely horrible way, like they
were essentially just boiled alive.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
The people that survived well, So we wrote a high
profile death dis section on this in the Grosser Room.
And it's because this is a different kind of volcano
that it's not the same one that hot like liquid
magma comes out of. It's another kind of volcano that
is underground, called a submarine volcano, and instead of lava

(07:04):
coming because that doesn't come to the surface because it's
so underwater that it makes hot steam and gases come out.
But it was the same thing. People were on a
tour with a cruise ship. It was just what was
it like a royal crew like one of these common cruises.
Was like hey, oh in New Zealand when you're in
New Zealand, like why don't you come tour?

Speaker 2 (07:23):
It wasn't a cruise like you took a boat to
go to the island, because I think it was like
a tour that you know, how like we're going on
a cruise and they're like, hey, do you want to
go see this cave or whatever?

Speaker 1 (07:33):
It was like an excursion. Yeah, it was like an
excursion on a cruise, like nothing, and ten thousand tourists
a year would visit this volcano and this one time
it ended up going off and you have to sign
a weaver. So anytime you have to sign a waiver,
you always have to be like, Okay, they know something
really bad has happened or is going to happen, but

(07:53):
they make people wear gas masks and stuff like that.
But apparently this eruption went off when people were there
and like scolding hot water came out and burned people
so bad, and twenty two people died and two what
wasn't it Like two of them never would Their bodies
just weren't found.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
Yeah, it's what I'm talking about. They just like vaporize
and thin air because of how like.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Crazy it was. Yeah, so I don't I mean that
that one. I don't know if I would care about
as much because you don't get to see the lava anyway.
I mean, it's still it's still so cool, but it's
the same thing as like We've talked about people going
in these hot springs and this and that and just
going too close to things you shouldn't go to. I like,
I get that, but I don't know. For a volcano

(08:35):
like the one in Italy, I think I would make
an exception. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Like I we all know that I'm not adventurous cards,
so what idea is.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
Like, I'll stay in the hotel and watch it on TV.
It will give me the same feeling.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
Yeah, I liked all the alt shots in Italy of
everybody like eating their pizzas just watching it like far
off in the distance.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
So cool.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
No, it's really cool looking. And the one in Hawaii
is really interesting because apparently this was the twenty third
eruption since Christmas, it's been erupting about once a week.
And I was looking at the live stream of it
this morning and it looks like it's about to go again.
So this happened in Hawaii last two Sundays ago, so
it looks like it's about to go again. And then

(09:17):
I guess in Italy this is the biggest eruption they've
had ETNA in about four years.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
But it's erupted twelve times this year already. Yeah, I'm
always like that has to happen when I go visit there.
Not too bad. Just like even if I could look
at it from Afar eating something, it would be nice.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
But something I thought was interesting with ETNA was they
said it started having activity in the middle of the night.
So why would you still allow the tourists to go
there in the morning, because.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
There's probably a limit of where they decide it's okay
for people to go. I don't really know how it works,
I do. I thought the same thing, like, I thought
they had some notification that the thing was about to go,
but I don't know. Maybe it showed that level before
and it never was dangerous enough for the people to

(10:05):
be there. But no one got.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
Hurt, right, I don't believe anybody got hurt. People were
definitely running. I mean I would run after I saw
that Netflix documentary because that seemed absolutely horrible and people
were like all the way up there. But when you
saw it from the distance, I mean, it is just
like one of the coolest natural things to see videos.
I mean, I would love to see something like that
in person, but maybe not so up close.

Speaker 1 (10:30):
All right, So this, God, this is the true definition
of a freak accident. Yeah, over a Memorial Day weekend,
a father was teaching his fifteen year old daughter how
to drive. And so during the lesson, they were in
a parking lot at a grocery store. But somehow she
hit this fence in the parking lot and she plummeted
forty feet into an embankment below, which ended up killing

(10:51):
the dead. Oh my god, how tragic. Right, And so
many of us could on I mean, like so many
of us could relate to this apparent or an adult
in our life taught us how to drive. Right, So
we've always we have always been in that situation, one
of us at least at some point in our life.
You know what's weird? So in California, I'm assuming you

(11:12):
could drive when you're sixteen there, because fifteen years old
is so young for a permit, Like in New Jersey
you have to be seventeen or eighteen years old. There's
I know, they they bumped it up. I think when
I was a kid, I don't even remember. But did
they say since when I was seventeen? Did they say
she had her permit? Yeah, they said that she had
her permit.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
Because parents oftentimes will teach their kids to drive before
they even have anything, So it's sad. In one of
the articles that I read, it said that she had
a permit, So I don't know what the rules are,
but it and it doesn't matter.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
I mean, it does matter to me. I feel like
you should wait a little bit. The older you could
wait with kids, the more their brain is developed. But
this is a common thing that people hit the gas
instead of the break or whatever. And you know, so
she was maybe she was trying to go into reverse
and went and drive by accident or you know, something

(12:06):
like that, one of those types of things. So it
just is a freak accident because they so happened to
be right on the other edge of a cliff. And
I mean, like you couldn't even make this up if
you tried. But she survived. The car flipped upside down,
she survived. The dad didn't like, imagine how she's gonna feel.
Just terrible.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
Yeah, And it would be understandable if she didn't want
to drive. Ever, I mean, the first time you're trying
to learn how to do it, it's really traumatic. I
think too, when you're a teenager and you're just learning,
you kind of like freak out because you just don't
know where stuff is and you don't think you're going
to react quickly enough. I mean, I even remember, you know,
you guys taught me to drive, and then when I
got my license and I was allowed to drive by

(12:46):
myself for the first time, I went to the post
office and I was laughing.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
The entire drugs. It's like, this feels so weird, and
like I was so scared. I also think when I
was teaching you and when Pop Pop was teaching me,
it's like, didn't we go to the acme parking lot
and just where there was like not a car in sight,
that there would be no way you could accidentally do anything,
Because well, I think that's what happened with them.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
I just don't think they realized the edge of the
parking lot was like's on a cliff. So yeah, I
think most people go to parking lots because it's a
lot of open room. But I guess in this landscape,
I mean, we don't really live in like a mountainous area.
I'm just going to say, we're really flat here, so
maybe that's it. She is what totally sucks, all right,
So this was the other story we were talking about

(13:32):
hate crimes and things. This is definitely a hate crime.
I think it's even been categorized as a terrorist attack
because it's trying to scare a group of people, which
clearly it is, because I would be terrified right now
to know that there were psychos walking around just trying
to kill me based upon whatever my religion is or

(13:52):
my thoughts were, which is super scary. But this guy, Yeah,
all of this news broke. Of course, this is all
on video because it was out in broad daylight. This
guy just dressed up as.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
A gardener or a landscaper with molotov cocktails in a
backpack that some a similar set up almost to if
you were putting a chemical in a weed spryer, and
he sprayed gasoline on people and set them on fire.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Yeah, and police were saying it was almost kind of
this like makeshift flamethrower thing that he devised. But he
attacked this peaceful pro Israel demonstration. It happened broad daylight,
like you were saying, totally out of nowhere. These people
were just like doing their thing, peaceful protests, and this
guy comes out of nowhere and starts attacking all of them.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Eight people ended.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Up going to the hospital with burns. They ranged from
fifty two to eighty eight years old. I can't imagine
how horrible these injuries must have been. I mean, burns
are some of the worst things we cover well.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
And some of the some of the witnesses of the
attack said that it was skin was melting off of
these people's bodies. One person had it from their ankle
all the way up to their butt. The one man
said that there were these really deep cuts inside of
one of the victims and there was blood pouring out

(15:17):
of them. And now at this point, you're talking about
like third and fourth degree burns from this. So so yeah,
obviously gasoline is very flammable. One thing that people, even
the suspect people, don't realize is that gas has such
a low flash point, so that's when it catches on fire,

(15:39):
just the vapors of it. And Gabe shows me videos
sometimes of like there was this one that was going
viral of this woman like setting her boyfriend's car on
fire or whatever, and a lot of times he was
saying that too, like a lot of times people don't
realize that use this, that just the vapor in the
air alone can cause such a powerful explosion or flame

(16:02):
that even if you pour it somewhere and you're further away,
it could just ignite because it's in the air that
the volume of it in the air is so high
that it catches on fire very easily, which makes sense
because this guy, it was a lot of people thought
that he got burned himself because he was wrapped up,
appearing to have wounds as well, which would make sense

(16:23):
because he had it on his body so close to
him like that. So, I mean, the scary part is
the whole thing is scary, But to me, it's even
scarier to think that this guy was planning this for
an entire year and he's so he's not from here,
he's from Egypt or something and came here on a

(16:44):
visa which is expired, so technically he's not even like
he's illegal right now because his thing expired. Whatever. But
this guy's got a wife and kids, and he has
a daughter that was about to graduate high school, and
I guess she did because he said he was waiting
for her to graduate high school.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
And then three days later executed the attack. Like why
even wait, you still ruined her life. It's so fucked up,
So you if you hear about this.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Apparently some Colorado newspaper published an article with a student
who was matching the daughter's description, and she was saying
how her family immigrated to the United States after living
in Kuwait, and her dad had undergone difficult surgery when
she was young, which is interesting, and restored his ability
to walk. So I'm wondering if that injury had anything

(17:31):
to do with what's happening in the guy's brain. But
she was saying that that was what inspired her to
want to go to medical school, and saying it was
a dream that would have been impossible in Kuwait but
within reach in America. Like this, this girl seemingly wanted
to like have an American dream which is now destroyed

(17:51):
because of what her dad just did. Like how's she
going to have a normal life living here?

Speaker 2 (17:58):
Yeah, I mean because I guess she could still, in
theory go forward with medical school, but like, you're gonna
forever have this attached to you, And I feel like
in this situation, it's like, what are you gonna do
change your name or like move when you've had.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
This already out it. This is the problem with social media,
like she's or maybe the problem or not the problem,
but she's outed on social media, like everybody knows who
she is and what she looks like, it's all over
the place. So it's like and even so like if
she let's say she has graduated high school now and
she was planning on going to college in September, taking
summer off, going to college in September, Like, is she

(18:31):
gonna be able to start college in September after this?
I mean, come on, It's just it's so it's so
selfish and crazy. And then then you have to think of, Okay,
well he was like living with a wife and kids,
like nobody had any idea that this was happening, Like
it just, well, I don't think all the time.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
It's obvious, you know, so you can't like family, I don't.

Speaker 1 (18:53):
I don't assume that they know. I just think that
I think a lot of things are And it's interesting
too with this story because there's a couple people that
were witnessed that something in their head during this rally
they were having or demonstration or protest or whatever, they
noticed that something wasn't right, and they were like something

(19:13):
triggered in their brain, like, hey, that's weird that there's
a guy doing landscaping right now on a Sunday, because
like landscaping companies usually don't work on the weekends, right, yeah,
they and like why would they be landscaping when there
was an active thing going on. It's just a little weird, right,
So it triggered some people to just be like, you

(19:34):
know what, like I'm just gonna go away from this
right now. And you always have to use your instinct
whenever you see something weird, and this could happen too
in situations where like I'm sorry, but like this dude
has been planning this for a year, like somebody that
knows him thought that he was off in some kind
of a way. There's no way that you're just like

(19:56):
a he was an uber driver, by the way, which
is also freaking scary. It just to think that you're
getting in the car with somebody like this. Yeah, And
I'm not saying like his wife didn't know, but you
can't assume that because I think I know. I'm just
saying that I just don't believe that there was never
any kind of hint of it. And I get that
people like want to ignore because there's a big difference

(20:19):
between people that are just like full of hate and
have rhetoric versus people that are actually going to do it.

Speaker 2 (20:24):
I mean, think about that story we talked about with
the mom that bought all those supplies for her school
shooters on, Like if the grandmother didn't call police, that
plan might have gone through and he might have killed
a lot of people. Sometimes a lot of family members
see these glaring red flags smacking them right in the
face and they are like, oh, in denial about it

(20:45):
or exactly they don't want the trouble of it. Yeah,
So I don't know. I mean, this is really unfortunate.
I don't understand why this guy's being held on ten
million dollar bond. If they've determined this is a terroristic
threat or a terroristic attack, why even set.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
A bond for somebody like that. It's kind of for
I was a wondering that today too. But all of
his charges that they are putting on him, if he
gets convicted of him, he'll be in jail for like
over a hundred years or something something like the rest
of his life. But yeah, I don't know, because that's
another thing too, like if these like you don't know
who people are, right and what kind of money they're

(21:23):
connected to. But like, if I think it was a
ten million they said it was ten million dollars cash bond,
which means you have to come up with all of
that or just ten percent of that. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
I don't know, but like to me, listen, Like to me,
people figure that out.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Sometimes you don't know. That's why he is a super
rich family member elsewhere in the world that could give
him the money. So I'm like, why even said it,
even if it's astronomically high. You don't know what people
have in their back pocket. I don't know. I don't
know what determines like when people get it might just
be on the jurisdiction like they're they might not put

(21:59):
no bond on anyone in that particular area. I'm not sure,
but whatever, We'll keep you updated if we hear anything.
I mean, the thing that really sucks is that most
of these people are elderly. It doesn't even matter if
they're young or elderly, but it's just kind of like
when you're old, you get older, your body hurts. You've
been through so much in your life. You have to

(22:21):
get hip surgery, and you got cancer and this and that,
like this is cool, like thanks that you're putting these
people through this, Like the rest of their life is
going to be absolutely torturous skin grafts, surgeries, hospitalizations, infections,
Like it's just it's so messed up and I don't
know what to say about it. I don't understand how

(22:41):
anyone justifies in their mind. And that's why I think
it's more alarming when when it's planned out for a year,
because it's not impulsive at all. It's just like you're
you're really messed up, like you're walking up to a
human being and setting them on fire. Like it's so weird.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
Yeah, it's just really disturbed. This episode is brought to
you by the Grosser Room guys. So as promised, we
did our high profile that the section this week on
physician assistant suicide, and I think that we learned a

(23:18):
lot of things that we didn't know. I didn't really
I know that some of the people had to take
if they were self administering, had to take medications and
a combination of medications, but I certainly didn't expect to
hear that in some cases the people have to take
one hundred pills, and just the stories and the accounts

(23:40):
of people that witnessed this, this physician assisted suicide with
their family members are not great as you would think
that they would.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
Just fall asleep and go out of this world. So
it was a really interesting post to write, so check
that out in the Grosser Room. We also have some
other cases of maggot, so a lot of cases of
maggots involving healthcare workers on live people. So that's a
pretty interesting debate that we're having right now hearing the
stories of some people that have went through this at

(24:11):
their job. So check out the Grosser Room.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
Yeah, head over to the Grosserroom dot com. Now, okay,
so a while ago we talked about this little girl
who died after going to the dentist and I think
initially we thought it was complications from the anesthesia, but
now the medical examiner has new information.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Well it's not it's not really new information. When did
we talk about this, It was baks ago. Yeah, so
so at the time when when this this little girl
she was getting routine dental worked on and the family
was saying that they discharged her when she was still asleep,
and then throughout the day they they were checking on

(24:51):
her and stuff, and finally they found her unresponsive, so
they called nine one one and she was pronounced dead.
So when they did the all time, so they did
think it was something about the anesthesia because she was
so young and she didn't have any history of an
underlying health problem or anything like that. But they said

(25:12):
ultimately her cause of death was from met hemoglobinemia, which
is globin is a form of hemoglobin that is a
protein on the red blood cells that carries oxygen throughout
the body. And they were saying it's in the background
of the nitrous oxide that she was given for or
the laughing gas you would say at the dentist's office.

(25:35):
So it leads to a condition called hypoxia, which is
when the oxygen cannot go on the blood cells and
go to all the organs and provide your entire body
with oxygen and then you die. What's interesting about this
particular so this particular diagnosis you can get either naturally,
so it could be a genetic thing that causes that.

(25:55):
Did you ever see that guy that was making his
rounds on like the Povich Show and stuff that he
was called Papa Smurf and he was like blue, Uh, yeah,
I feel like he had like blue skin, So he
had like the congenital or the genetic variant of that.
And I think there's been a lot of articles done
on that guy, like the the Smurf family. In the
blue I found that.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Was like the colloidal silver. Remember Mother Mother God was
like blue turning blue too, and she.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Was not with not with that particular guy, but so yes,
or you could get it from chemical exposure, so with
the nitrous oxide, sodium nitrate, things like that could cause
it as well. So I'm wondering if that was one
of the things that was a striking finding at autopsy
that she had this this this bluish tint to her skin.

(26:44):
And but yeah, so just getting the results back in general,
So that guy, right, I'm trying to look for it
in my nose right now. Remember back in twenty and sixteen,
he was also accused of almost killing a fifty four
year old that was put under anesthesia which caused his
heart to stop, and the investigator said that it was

(27:05):
because he was given drugs that he shouldn't have been given.
So this guy's already had a potential issue with anesthesia.
And we were saying at the time when we reported
this back in April that it's scary to know that
your dentist has already been accused of almost killing someone
with anesthesia. It's something like you don't even know happened.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
Yeah, I mean, I also can't really wrap my mind
around discharging a patient that's still asleep. I was thinking
of all the times I've had anesthesia and I've been
monitored for like a while after waking up. So I
don't understand why in any world where that is a
normal procedure.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
I don't either, all right. So the next story that
we have is this story about it took place in
the Netherlands, I believe, where people bought brand name candy
from a store and we're having all of these symptoms
with it, and got the candy tested. Did they test
the candy? Who tested the candy? No? So let me

(28:08):
go over what happened.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
So this family in the Netherlands bought these Harry Bo
Happy Cola Fizz candies, so they ate them and a
couple of people got sick. So they had reported it
to the Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority. They
tested the bags and then found that weed was in
three of the bags full of gummies like in the gummies.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
Yeah, like in the product front, what's the brand, like
the ribot, like the gummy brand, Yes, like legit candy.
And it's scary because they don't even know how many people,
like obviously they're recalling all the bags, but they don't
know how many kids ate it. People ate it. I
mean kids could get really sick from it, especially sick,

(28:49):
more sick than smoking it or anything like that, because
ingesting it is just stays in your body so much longer,
you know. So the agency had reported this to harr
and then they looked at products made with the similar
sheerial number and batch number, I guess. So they've recalled
ones that had to sell by date of January twenty
twenty six, and from there they're trying to figure out

(29:11):
how they even got in the gummies, because of course,
if they're in the gummies themselves, not just the bags,
this is like a major manufacturing issue because they're going
into the ingredients themselves. But they're saying at this time
they're not sure how they got in the candy, or
if the bags were even made by Harrabo or if
there were something. This is like the russ shooting, right,
like how did a live bullet get into a gun

(29:33):
that was a prop gun when it shouldn't even have
been on set. It's the same thing like how did
weed get into candy that it shouldn't even be in
the factory? It's well to me, it's far to me,
it's more realistic that there are weed gummies that are
falsely wrapped with harrab wrong labels. Oh my god, what
like like somebody that made weed gummies put them in

(29:55):
a Harrobo bag Because I can't possibly fathom how you
would get the weed into the ingredients of the gummy
bears in the facility. So you're saying it's like a
mislabeling at the factory. No, not a mislabeling at the factory,
like a fraud used the Harribo bags now I wrap

(30:17):
their product. I don't think so, because why would anybody
do that? Like what are you saying, like the comedience
store person, like why would you think like somebody actually
just like took weed gummies and put them in a
bag and hung them up to sell them. Like that
doesn't even make any sense because like why would anybody
put no?

Speaker 2 (30:34):
I think because I think they got switched up, like
I could see a world in which they're put in
this bag to disguise what they really were.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
I don't know what the legality of marijuana is in
the Netherlands. Aren't they pretty open about it there? I'm
thinking of Amsterdam. Yeah, I don't know, so, I mean
Amsterdam is, but I don't know if the whole place is.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
I'm just saying because remember, like a couple of years ago,
I had to put a ban on shaping weed gummies
in the US, like gummy bears, because they were too
similar looking to the real candy.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Yeah, so what if a drug dealer.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
Over there is using brand name bags to disguise them
so they're not getting in trouble, and then somehow they.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Got mixed up. That theory is far fetched.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
I'm just saying to me, it's equally as far fetched
that all this weed got into the ingredients and got
manufactured into the candy.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
Well, I I don't think so. I mean, like I
think that. What you know, how like when you get
peanut butter or regular eminems and it's like, oh, this
is made in a factory that's got peanuts, so like,
don't eat this if you get sick kind of thing.
Maybe it's like these things are being made in similar
factories and then there's no way they just should be
the wrong. Yeah, but like it's not allowed, but whatever happened,

(31:51):
it happens like something happened.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
Yeah, but with weed, Like all right, this isn't like
a piece of metal from the machine making the gummy
bear mixture got in the gummy bears right like, and
it doesn't seem like they were visibly in there, like
floating in the gummy I mean it's clear candy, So
like this had to be some type of oil or something.
I just find know what I'm saying, Like I'm saying,

(32:13):
like okay, on this conveyor belt, there's gummy bears that
are for weed, right, and then this conveyor belt is
the Haribou gummies. And like the rappers, the role of
rapper that the person put on the machine was like
mixed up.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
Literally nobody could take that chance ever that that is
it's not a chance it is, but it's like if
the dude work in there was high, then like this
makes total sense. I don't freaking know.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
You can't be making like Xanax and mints on the
same like machine.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
They looks like I just hope the label. I don't
know what the hell's going on in the Netherlands over there.
I don't know at this point, they don't know how
it got in there. They don't even know if it's
really their product in the bags, but it was bags
that said hairbo and they did take the steps to
recall candy. I mean, I don't understand how this could

(33:02):
possibly happen. I'm really interested.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
It wasn't a kid though, right, it was an adult.
It's at a family with a couple people.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
Listen, Like, honestly, I told you I had a horrible
story of taking a weed edible. It was like the
worst experience I ever had in my life. I was
going out of my mind. If I took that and
didn't know that I took it, I don't even know
what I would do. I would call nine one one
and just be like, dude, I'm like freaking out right
now you've most called what do you do it? I

(33:31):
almost do yeah, I did, because I thought I thought
that I was like dying. It was terrible. It was
so terrible because like the you know when you and
and I smoked it at that time, right, so it
was like Okay, I was used to it, right, what
what is it? Oh, I'm just gonna take a piece
of this edible instead because I don't want to physically

(33:51):
smoke it. And like no, no, no, it hits way longer,
it lasts longer, it's more intense. It's just nothing I
ever experienced in my life. Like I would think that
that was like some really good or you should say
bad acid I was on or something. I don't even
breaking now. It was terrible. I think you just I

(34:12):
literally called my husband and told them to come home
from work because I was scared to be alone. Like
it was ridiculous. I think you just took too high
of a dose.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
Because like back in the day when gummies first started
floating around, they said they were ten milligrams, but they
were really like sixty or seventy five. So you would
only eat half, thinking you're eating five, but then you're
really eating a lot, and then all of a sudden
you're falling asleep at Longhorn Steakhouse.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Wasn't me. I thought I thought that I was poisoned.
I did. I thought that that's so ridiculous. No it's not,
because it was terrible. I don't I don't take back
my reaction. It was not overreacting. I was. I was
sitting there and like you know when you're cold outside
and your teeth chatter, like I was shaking. I couldn't

(34:58):
stop it. It was terrible. I find I'm interio tweaking
out in the corner. It was so terrible. And then
Gabe came home from work and was like, go to
bed right now. Remember when I called him and he
was like, you being telling me I need to close
my company and come home because you took a weed
gummy or something.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
And I was like, yes, And this is why I
actualy such a Karen now I am, because it's fucking
terrible and people shouldn't be doing that shit. It was.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
It's terrible. I have personal experience with it, Like I
could you imagine taking that and driving and shit, or
like functioning or making haribou gummy bears in a factory?
Like you can't. You can't function on that stuff, would you.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
I wouldn't even think to call like anybody about it.
I would just assume I had like food poisoning or something.
I don't even know what you would do in this situation,
you would.

Speaker 1 (35:48):
Because how do you know it's from the gun times.
This happened to my sister one time. Right, we had
this is like typical mom on fashion, all of the
all of the pills in the house, like in the
medicine cabinet or like some like Kmart brand, you know,
Walmart brand, whatever you want to call it. This was
back in This was back in the early two thousand,

(36:11):
so I'll call it Kmart brand. Right, And Annie had
a headache and she took a talent all and went
to school to college, and she like called me and
was just like I don't know what's wrong with me.
I just can't keep my eyes open, like I don't
know what's wrong. And I was like so scared. I
thought like she was, I don't know what I thought
was happening. Right, No, I go and look at the

(36:32):
til and all I said, did you take any medicine?
Blah blah blah. She's like, yeah, I had a headache.
So I'm thinking, like, oh my god, she's like like
having a stroke or so I don't even for She's
like the next tile in all poisoning vigeine, like I
don't even know. And sure enough I go in the
cabinet and it's like some shit that MoMA had these
like til and all PM in a regular container box
or whatever it was. So she took two til and

(36:55):
all PM and didn't know it. She took regular tilet
all and like, obviously, when you don't know that you
took something like that, you're automatically like something really bad
is happening right now, you know, Like imagine taking talin
all PM in the middle of the day and being
at college and just like feeling that way.

Speaker 2 (37:14):
Can we get scary? Can we talk about people who
put different pills in different name bottles, because I've vividly
does it all the time.

Speaker 1 (37:23):
He does it all the time. He like brings his
all his medications if we own a trip and stuff
and his vitamins whatever, They're like all mixed in one container.
And I'm just like, dude, this is a terrible idea.

Speaker 2 (37:33):
No, he does do it, because one time I asked
him for a ibuprofen eight hundred and he gave me
a pill and I was like, this does out of
his weird little glass jar and You're like, no, it
was out of the ibuprofen eight hundred container. And I
looked at it and I was like, this looks different.
Than the ones I normally take, and it was like
a blood pressure pill.

Speaker 1 (37:50):
I'm like, dude, what are you fixing them? Every single time?
I'm like, do you have something? I always go on
like that pill finders like website I do because I'm like,
I don't, I don't trust you. But I vividly remember
growing up at my other grandmom's house and then being like,
don't ever take anything out of the bottle ask her
for because she would just mix them up. Yeah, Like

(38:11):
what are you doing?

Speaker 2 (38:12):
I think it's I think it's just like a strange thing.
I understand combining like medicines, even though you probably really
shouldn't do that, but I think I'm like opposite. It's
so crazy. I have like one of those boxes that
lit that list.

Speaker 1 (38:26):
Like a m PM Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, like everything separated.

Speaker 2 (38:31):
No, I'm not even talking about pill organizers. I'm talking
about putting like clariton in.

Speaker 1 (38:35):
The tailant all bottle. I know, just why even Well, yeah,
and that's what happened. Like Annie took a you know,
Thailand al PM for college bright Daylight. Well, you have
her what I call the munch House in closet, which
is like all of your over the counter drugs finally
organized in those drawers. What this is the thing? Right?

(38:58):
It's like, let's say, friends sample, when Luccia was having
that weird psoriasis that turned into a fungal infection, they
gave her like fifteen different prescription creams. So what am
I gonna throw them out? No? I keep them aside
because I'm like, I don't know, I might need this
for a rainy day, and that's that's how it goes.
So I just save everything, like I don't know that's

(39:21):
what happened. That's that's how I had a modium ad
from two thousand and eight in my cabin. It's still yeah,
that was like a couple of weeks ago, but it
was after Easter, and I don't even know what happened.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
I might have had some like low grade food poisoning
or whatever. You did not have food poisoning because nobody
else had food poisoning. We all ate the same food.

Speaker 1 (39:39):
Well I did. I had to because what else was it.
That's that's all it could have been. It was just
like like a couple day thing that was just terrible.
So I was like, didn't I have to get my
sutures out from my biopsy or something from my face.
It was something that I had to go. I had
to drive, so I was like, all right, I'm just
gonna take a modium, so like I don't poop in

(39:59):
my car, right, So I go in my in my
Munchausen's closet to get my emodium, and I look at
it and because like if stuff's like four years expired,
I don't really care, honestly, but like this was it
said it was two thousand and eight. I don't even
know how it's here because I I haven't even lived
the house since two thousand. Yes, that was like when
I went to Drexel. That's what I've expired. That's what

(40:21):
you were like thirteen, yeah, or right, like how old
were you when I started school? You were like thirteen
or fourteen years old? Yeah, So anyway, yeah, that was funny.
I was like, you know what, that's a little too
a little too long for myself. You know, I had
to replace it. So now there now it's there in
the munch Housing closet in case you ever need it
when you come over.

Speaker 2 (40:40):
But when I got in Pentago that one time, you
did have the career I do.

Speaker 1 (40:44):
I just saw it. I have it up there. Well,
I have everyone that you took. I have another one.
I have a backup anytime, so we don't we don't
ever have to go to the drug store. Everything's up there,
all right. So speaking of drugs, this this so Lara
sent me this story, and I have a really really
good story to tell you about Lara with this. Okay, So,
over Memorial Day weekend, two hikers called nine one one

(41:06):
to say that their friend who was hiking with them.

Speaker 2 (41:08):
Died and they were lost and didn't know where they were.
But when the police got there, their friend was very
much alive, and it turns out they were just all
tripping on mushrooms.

Speaker 1 (41:17):
I love this so much. So the reason so, when
you take this philocybin, the magic mushrooms, that's like the
magic chemical in them. People take low doses of it
that they say it helps with like anxiety and depression
and stuff like that, like what are they called a
micro dose? But if you take it, it's it's essentially

(41:38):
like taking Nature's acid. It makes you hallucinate. Right, So
the reason Lara sent me this was funny story. When
we when we were teenagers, we were going over my
mom doesn't even know the story, but she'll know after
she listens to it. I think I know this story.
So we so we worked at hot topic together at

(41:58):
the mall when we were teening, and she was like, hey, like,
let's my dad is out of town for the weekend,
so like, let's hang out at my dad's house and
we'll like watch movies and hang out or whatever. Right,
because we always had like a really great time. So
I'm like, Okay. So I go over there and she's like, look,
I have a surprise. I made these these weed brownies

(42:20):
or something. I don't even know what it was, but
they I don't know if they have mushrooms out on whatever.
I don't even remember how mushrooms got into it. Maybe
they were in the mushroom or in the brownies or whatever. Laura,
you could clarify this for me. Whatever happened, we were
sitting there and we eat so we eat these mushrooms,
and we're sitting there. We were like laughing and peeing
our pants and having a great time, and I didn't

(42:40):
really think like anything was even off, which is exactly
what happened with these people. Like they literally called nine
one one and thought their friend was dead and like
they didn't realize that. They were just like imagining something happening, right,
So we eat and like we had all there was
all this food in the house and her dad had
been out of town. So we're like eating all this food. Oh,

(43:01):
I want tomato soup. We made tomato soup or like
dipping our bread in all this stuff. Okay. We wake
up the next morning and we're like, all right, we
need to find something to eat. And we go to
get the same exact bread that we were eating the
night before with our tomato soup. And it was like
dark green and fuzzy, mold covered bread like it was

(43:23):
there was not an ounce of whiteness on the bread.
It was like full fur. If you had a loaf
of bread in the cabinet for like six months and
we ate, we ate like half of the loaf of it.
It was outrageous. And then I was like freaking out
because that was like before I learned anything medical or anything.
And I was just like, oh my god, we're gonna

(43:44):
get so sick. And I remember called I called my
mom and I was like, what happens if you eat
moldy bread? Because I ate some by accident. She's like, oh,
you'll be fine whatever, like you might get diary or whatever,
and that was it. Like I didn't tell her what happened.
I was just like, yeah, I think like it was
an accident, but yeah, no, so that was what happened.
It was It was great. So that was like a

(44:04):
huge joke. Obviously we still have to this day because
she sent me this story.

Speaker 2 (44:09):
I thought you were gonna tell the story at the
time you ordered two pizzas because you didn't really know.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
That's no, that was it. That was an acid story.
Actually that was actually a hilarious story too though, when
like me and my friend like worked at Hairslon and
we both called out of work that day, which was
like obvious, and we just like we just sat there
all day and we did that and then we ordered
pizza and then she was laughing so hard when she

(44:37):
ordered the pizza that she like hung up on the
mid call. And then we called back again and ordered
it and then from a different place though, and then
the other person came first from the first pizza place,
so then we had like you know, like enough food
for like six different people. Like, yeah, that was funny.
That was like hilarious. But yeah, so.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
Good story, miss anti drugs telling all their funny drugs. Listen,
when I when I did drugs in the nineties, it
was just not like it is today. Okay, and I
am listen, this is you exactly, Like do you want
to hear people that are are straight edge telling you

(45:20):
not to do drugs or people that have done them
and been like okay, Like, listen, I didn't really have
any kind of a negative experience with doing mushrooms besides
eating moldy bread. Okay, so like I don't think it's bad,
but like, I also wouldn't trust getting any kind of
drugs like that.

Speaker 1 (45:37):
At this point unless you knew where you were getting
it from. But like, and yes, it was like totally
stupid to just get stuff like that because you're just like,
I don't know where the hell this came from or whatever.
But certainly with the weed, I have experience, And listen,
no matter what mushrooms I did or asked, I didn't
do that much of it. Only a few times in

(45:59):
my life. I have never been as messed up as
when I ate the weed edible. I'm telling you right now,
I've never been that out of my mind, not on anesthesia.
Never been that out of my mind. I was out
of my mind. It was. It was so crazy and
to think that that is legal right now is outrageous
to me. It's just outrageous. It's it's outrageous because yeah,

(46:23):
I probably took too much, but like, guess what, but
people don't know. People don't shake. And the scary thing
is is like when you spoke weed, within a second,
you're like, I'm high, right, Like when you do an
edible it might take up to hours for you to
even feel it. So people are like, oh, I don't
feel it, let me take it. More happens all the
time and then people are like oh god, and they're

(46:45):
in the corner crying and like, yeah, it's it's just terrible.
All right.

Speaker 2 (46:50):
Let's drive on to questions of the day. Every Friday
at the Mother knows that the Instagram account, you guys
can head over to our story and ask us whatever
you want. First, can you please tell the people well
that colon cleanses are a scam. Colon cleanses are a scam. Listen,
I've seen ads and stuff for people showing this animation

(47:10):
and illustrations.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
Of the colon being like blocked up with poop, similar
to what you would see like in a pipe that
had stuff stuck to it. And I could tell you
that I've opened Like listen, people get backed up with
poop for sure, but once it comes out, it doesn't
stick to the inside of the walls like it would
a pipe. That could lead to a blockage like that.

(47:34):
The way they show it on the illustration looks like
it's straight up as like like a build up a
draino commercial. Yes, that's like that's what it looks like,
and that doesn't happen, So uh, I don't know a
lot of people are they swear by it? I like,
and I guess like a lot of people feel that
way too, Like if you take a laxative and like

(47:56):
sometimes people just want to like clean it out. But
those things cleaning cleaning you out and get those canulas
getting up your butt, they could perforate your colon. The
stream of the water could blow a hole through your colon.
There's been documented cases of that happening. The people that
are doing colonics aren't I don't believe that they're trained.

(48:20):
It's just kind of like a side business. There used
to be a chick that worked at the Medical Examiner's
office that had a side business of that, which I
thought was so weird. I'm like, oh, you cut open
dead people during the day and you just do colonics
at night. Very very bizarre. But yeah, like I just
I don't I don't think it's a great idea. I
think the risk of perforation just would scare be enough

(48:43):
to not want to do it. And I don't really,
I don't know. And then there's like coffee enemas that
people do. I don't know. I just think it's hype.
It's just like saying everyone has parasites. It's like the
parasite cleanses up there, that's the that's the colonic of this,
set this or whatever.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
You know.

Speaker 1 (49:01):
Oh yeah, totally all right too. Tips for staying safe
while pregnant, working in the gross room, specifically with formaline.
Oh god, while I worked in the grosser room until
I was thirty six weeks with both pregnancies, and so
did my friend Andrea, and so did my friend Sybil
and Maria. I'm trying to think of all Karen was.

(49:24):
Karen was too, Like every single person that I worked
with was pregnant and worked in pathology so I remember
at some point there was a PA student who was
pregnant who got some letters site from her doctor saying
she couldn't like work in the lab because of the formalin,
and we were all so pissed. We're just like okay,
Like I remember doing an autopsy with Maria and like

(49:46):
she was such a little petite thing anyway, and her
belly was so big and like pulling bodies on the
tables and stuff. I don't really know what to say,
like is just make sure that your hood at your
job is like actually working, because at my last job
it didn't work. Of course, that was when I was
pregnant with both my kids, so that was really fun. Also,

(50:08):
so my friend Andrea had a very very unusual circumstance
a couple actually, but she so so Andrea was like
our research PA. So she mainly only did the frozens
all day, but we had a lot of frozens, Like
some days we get like one hundred frozens, and but
Andrea did all of them, and then we would go
in to help her if there was too many. Right,

(50:29):
So Andrea was like again, she worked up until I
think she was like she worked up until she had
ev so I think she was like thirty eight weeks.
And so one time she was doing a lung that
came down for cancer, a fresh lung d because she
would take the tissue and take it for research if
it was tumor, if there was enough to take. So

(50:50):
she was doing a lung that came down for cancer
and she cut it open and it was TB So
she was exposed to like straight up TV from someone's
lung right in her face. And then the weirdest one
was that we got a brain biopsy from someone thought
it was a brain tumor, looked at it under the
microscope and it was toxoplasmosis, which is a fungal infection

(51:16):
that is present in cat poop, which is why they
tell you when you're pregnant you can't change the cat litter.
So now here she is exposed to it. So when
she cuts the frozen section, like the little tiny pieces
are now like going in the air and everything like that.
And I remember she called her obstetrician and was and
was just like, Hi, I just did a frozen section

(51:36):
of a brain that had a toxoplasmosis, Like what should
I do? And the doctor was just like well, I
don't think I've ever heard that before. I don't know, like,
let me look it up and see what to do.
So Joe we does have like a very unusual job.
So she I think it was like a couple weeks
before she was having the baby anyway, And I think

(51:58):
the exposure with toxoplasms is more concerned early on with
development and stuff, so it wasn't that big of a deal.
So from then on out, she started wearing what with
every lung after the TV once she started wearing an
N ninety five mask every time she did a frozen,
which is not something you would typically do. But then
she didn't do it with the brain one, because you like,

(52:19):
why would a brain have anything like that? Yeah, just
so rare. So I guess all I'm trying to say
is like, if you, if you really want, if you,
if you work in a population that has like high
infectious stuff, the foremuline is just like just try to
work with it under a hood the best you can
and and like pray. I don't know, my kids are
like definitely not normal, so I can't promise that your

(52:42):
kid's gonna be come out good. I don't know, So
sorry if i'dn't have anything better to say.

Speaker 2 (52:48):
I'm sure that's reassuring to an expecting mother.

Speaker 1 (52:52):
All right, last favorite comfort movie. I don't know what's yours.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
I would say like Parent Trap, Pride and Practice.

Speaker 1 (53:03):
Say Parent Trap too, actually, because I we watched, like
I watch that with the kids a lot.

Speaker 2 (53:08):
Yeah, I like that. I liked Classic one, like When
Harry Met Sally.

Speaker 1 (53:13):
Like.

Speaker 2 (53:13):
I like them because they're like chill and relaxing and
they're beautiful to look at, you know.

Speaker 1 (53:18):
Yeah, like Moonstock, anything like that, any old like old movie,
you know, because it's funny. My kids do that now,
Like you know when you're a kid and you just
watch the same thing like six hundred times in a row. Yeah,
we had so many movies like that growing up, like Goonies,
Back to the Future, all that kind of stuff. So
it's just like when you say it, you're like, oh,

(53:39):
this is kind of relaxing, Like you could just put
it on in the background and you know what I
meant to tell you.

Speaker 2 (53:43):
It was remember when we went to DC for Little's
birthday a couple of years ago and we were watching
National Treasure, which was weird that it was on, and
then like that's when Lulu's nosebleed situation happen. A game
jumped up all dramatic. Well, what I was at Washington,
DC this weekend? It was on again, like all night marathon.
Really so weird that it's always on in hotel rooms.

(54:04):
Oh that's I just told them I wanted to watch.

Speaker 1 (54:07):
I forgot we watched it because we because Lulu just
went to the Constitution Center.

Speaker 2 (54:11):
So I was like, yeah, the field trip that I
wasn't allowed to go, I know, so ridiculous. Well, we
have an exciting announcement in July. You are going to
be going to Atlanta to do a meet and greet. Yeah,
I'm having a meet and greet and probably a lecture
the next day maybe, which will be super cool. So
stay tuned for details of the lecture, but the meet

(54:33):
and greet. Uh, The tickets are definitely available right now.
If you live in Atlanta or anywhere near there, you
should check it out because we don't really go a
lot of places. So yeah, we're gonna but we're gonna
go hang out with Cheryl McCollum from Zone and seven
and it's gonna be it's just gonna be super fun.
I'll bring a bunch of books, so I can sign

(54:55):
a book for you if you want, and we can
hang out and then you can see the lecture the
next day, so that'll be fun.

Speaker 1 (55:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (55:02):
So we don't have many details about the lecture right now,
but right now you could buy the tickets to the
meet and greed. So I'm going to put the link
for the tickets in the episode description, or it's on
the grossroom, or it's on our Instagram, so you can
see any of those places. And as usual, please head
over to Apple or Spotify and leave us a review,
or head over to YouTube and subscribe. And if you

(55:23):
have a story for us, please submit it to stories
at Mothernosdeath dot com. All right, guys, we'll see you tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (55:32):
Thank you for listening to Mother nos Death. As a reminder,
my training is as a pathologist's 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 or alive without the assistance of
a licensed medical doctor. This show, my website, and social

(55:56):
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 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

(56:18):
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 Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or
anywhere you get podcasts. Thanks

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