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October 6, 2025 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Monday. It's about
to be Medal of Honor Monday, which we're going to
get to a minute from now. Then I am going
to address this attorney general candidate in Virginia wishing death
on people. Surprise, surprise. We'll get to emails, all that,

(00:22):
so much more. Well, we've were trying to make fun
of Dome this hour. I'll get to that at some point.
All that and so much more coming up on The
Jesse Kelly Show. Before I get to any of that, though,
it's the start of the second hour on Monday, and
you know what time it is. It is Medal of
Honor Monday time. We take a Medal of Honor citation

(00:46):
at this time every week and we read it. It
is important for American citizens to do this. Young, old men, women,
remember your remember your deeds, talk about them. Why do
you think societies have prioritized this throughout history? Always in

(01:11):
a society, heroes are prioritized, They are spoken of. Why
it's not just to honor them. Oftentimes they're dead, It's
not just to honor them. And It's not just out
of respect for their family, although that's really important as well.
By honoring the good, by honoring your heroes and remembering

(01:35):
your deeds their deeds, it helps pass those values down
to future generations. It just does. Do you know one
of the reasons I joined the Marine Corps. I used
to watch John Wayne movies with my father. It was
my dad wasn't big on movies or really fun of
any kind, but he loved John Wayne movies. And one

(01:58):
of the movies we used to watch together was Sands
of Ewo Jima, where John Wayne played that Medal of
Honor recipient John Bazilone. And I watched that hero and
I watched him die. I know, it was just a movie,
and I'm telling you it stuck with me from a
from my earliest age, watching that it matters to talk

(02:20):
about this stuff with your kids and they're like movies.
And this gentleman here, it took a while for him
to get it. His name is Alwen Krendall case US Army.
He was a sergeant first class. He got he did
his deed back in two thousand and five in Iraq,

(02:43):
and it is it's pretty impressive.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
Hey, honoring those he went above and beyond. It's Medal
of Honor Monday set the first Class Alwan C. Case
distinguished himself by acts of gallantry above and beyond the
call of duty while serving as platoon sergeant with Company A,

(03:10):
first Battalion, fifteenth Infantry Regiment, third Brigade, third Infantry Division,
in Salah ad Din Province, Iraq. On October seventeenth, two
thousand and five, while on a nighttime mounted patrol near
an enemy laden village, the Bradley fighting vehicle which Sergeant
first class Case was commanding, was attacked by enemy small

(03:33):
arms fire and an improvised explosive device, which disabled the
vehicle and engulfed it in flames. After extracting himself from
the vehicle, Sergeant first class Case set about extracting the driver,
who was trapped in the vehicle.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
After opening the driver's hatch, Sergeant first Class Case in
a fellow soldier extracted the driver, who was engulfed in flames.
During the of extinguishing the flames on the driver and
extracting him from the vehicle, Sergeant first Class Case's fuel
soaked uniform ignited and caused several burns to his body.

(04:13):
Ignoring his painful wounds, Sergeant first class Case then moved
to the rear of the vehicle to continue in aiding
his fellow soldiers who were trapped in the troop compartment.
At this time, the enemy noted his movements and began
to direct their fire on his position. When another element
of the company engaged the enemy, Sergeant first class Case

(04:36):
seized the opportunity and moved into the open troop door
and aided four of his soldiers in escaping the burning vehicle.
Having extracted the four soldiers, Sergeant first class Case noticed
two other soldiers had not been accounted for, and again
he entered the vehicle to retrieve them. Remember this vehicle
was on fire at this time. Reinforcements are to further

(05:01):
suppress the enemy and establish a casualty collection point. Despite
severe second and third degree burns covering the majority of
his body, Sergeant first class Case persevered through the pain
to encourage his fellow soldiers and ensure they received needed
medical care. When medical evalue evacuation helicopters began to arrive,

(05:25):
Sergeant first class Case selflessly refused evacuation until all other
wounded soldiers were evacuated. First Sergeant first class. Case's extraordinary
heroism and selflessness above and beyond the call of duty
were in keeping with the highest traditions of military service,
and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the

(05:48):
United States Army. He had burns over seventy percent of
his body. He survived twenty two days in agonizing pain,
and then eventually he passed from his injuries. Rest in peace. Brother,

(07:05):
second and third degree burns kept going in for his men.
That's why you tell those stories. That's important. Let's do
some emails before we talk about some other things. Hey, Oracle,
I was so enthusiastic about this shutdown because I thought
Trump and his team would just start firing people. Why

(07:26):
haven't we seen one person fired yet? I'm disappointed. Why
aren't they Well, there's a couple of things. First, there
are rules, there are steps you have to go through
in order to fire someone, even during a shutdown. So
let's get that out of the way first. There's a delay. Okay,

(07:49):
But I'm disappointed too, very disappointed. I'm disappointed because threats
were made and not followed up on. That's why I'm disappointed.
I'm looking at a headline right here. You know what
The headline says Trump Budget chief says firings are coming
in one to two days due to the shutdown. This

(08:14):
is the start of week two as of I believe
Wednesday it will be two weeks. Where Where are the
mass layoffs? I was promised repeatedly, mass layoffs, over and
over and over again. I was promised mass layoffs. There

(08:35):
have been a few. There have been some furloughs. A
furlough is not a firing. A furlough is you're gonna
get paid. Where is it I was promised this would come.
Where is the cleanout? Was this only a negotiating tactic

(08:57):
to bring Democrats to the table. I want to see
government communists fired. We cannot save the country, as we've
discussed a million times before, with a bunch of hostile
infiltrators inside of the government working to kneecap the Trump
administration and attack you and me at every turn. A

(09:18):
government shut down that Democrats caused on purpose is a
perfect opportunity to clean some communists out of the government.
They must be rooted out. Where are these firings? What
is the hold up? Look, if it's got to be
mass furloughs for sixty days, fine, that's not happening in

(09:40):
mass not at all. Millions of government employees, where are
we What are we doing here? Because if we don't
start with this stuff, democrats are going to continue to
think they're the only ones who've taken a negotiating position
are to go. Shading position is, let's just keep doing

(10:02):
what we were doing. They're trying to get a win.
If that continues, they're going to get something for it,
and we will have lost. I'm disappointed too. It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Monday. Remember you
can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com
and I'll get to those emails in a minute, and

(10:23):
then we're going to talk about this Virginia attorney general
wishing death on his opponents and things like that. I
just have to get this out of the way first.
I'm becoming my father more and more rapidly. We've had
this talk before. It's happening faster and faster, and the
lack of patience I have for people who don't speak

(10:46):
English has become palpable. I'm not talking about people in
foreign lands or what now. I'm talking about people who
work here, people who do business here who can't speak English.
So our power went out. This was last week. The
power goes out and it didn't turn out to be

(11:07):
a big deal. It was like twenty four hours we
didn't have power, but it wasn't a big deal. They
they were doing construction and they sliced the line and okay,
so during this powder power outage, my kids had homework
to do and stuff like that. So I'm kind of
anxious to get power back on. Some kids could do homework,
you know, they're at a coffee shop doing it. So
I just placed the call. Not to yell at anybody,

(11:29):
but I called the power company to try to get
an estimate. Hey, when do you think the power is
coming back? I don't need it by the minute, but
I need to know that, like should I be should
I be getting a hotel tonight? Just give me some
kind of a gauge. Call the power company. Dude hardly
speaks English. Okay, I'm already a little frustrated, but not

(11:52):
the end of the world. Okay. So it's my understanding
that that that you want that that you want would
like to to to add our services. I said no,
who said that?

Speaker 2 (12:04):
No?

Speaker 1 (12:04):
I don't want to add any I'm already a customer.
I don't want to How could you even get that
from what I just said? I would like to know
there's a power outage in my area. I would like
to know what. I would like to know what the
estimate is for it to come back. Oh uh okay,
so I can give you an estimate on how much

(12:25):
it will cost to add our services. And now now
my blood pressure is starting to go up. Is I said?
Is that what I said that? Did you even listen
to what I said? Are you listening to what I said?
Do you speak English? What are you talking about? I'm
already a customer. I just gave you my name. You
have the phone number. I'm already a customer. The power
is out of Oh okay, hang on, I can check.

(12:50):
And I got so freaking frustrated that I just hung
up the phone. It was bad for my blood pressure.
I hung up the phone and just kind of went
outside and just walked around for a bit. Here's the
best part. A couple hours later, I get a text message,
automated text message from this power company. It's an advertisement

(13:12):
advertising their services, thanking me for reaching out and telling
me that I can have a discount if I sign
up with this power company. All right, now, I'm steaming
right now, I'm blocking the number. I'm steaming.

Speaker 2 (13:23):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
The next day, I think this is Saturday. The next
day I get a freaking email from the power company
advertising their services, thanking me for reaching out, telling me
they'd love to have me as a customer. Now I'm
really steaming. I'm blocking it. Don't just blocking an email.
I'm moving on Yesterday. Remember I gave you the backstory.

(13:49):
I'm already at an eleven. I'm already at eleven yesterday.
Phone rings. It's a local number. I'm thinking, okay, maybe
it's something who knows whatever. It's a local number. You
never know, is that the doctor is at whatever? Answered
the phone. Another foreigner who hardly speaks English is on

(14:10):
the phone trying in broken English to sell me the
power services of the power company that I am already
a customer on. Now. AB is sitting right there for
the laundry. Both the boys at the dining room table
doing homework. In hindsight, I wished I had stepped outside.

(14:32):
I should have. I should have stepped outside. I did
not step outside. I'm not making excuses for myself. I
should have stepped outside, but I didn't. I informed her,
I said, lady, I am already a freaking customer of
your power company, and you don't know that because no

(14:54):
one in your customer service apparently reads, speaks or understands English.
Gets some fricking people who speak English, and don't ever
call my phone again. And I hung up the phone
and the boys are looking at me and they're snickering,
right and Op, it's mortified, absolutely mortified. Couldn't you just
be nice? And now I feel about an inch hot?

(15:16):
What Chris? What Chris said? So what are you gonna do?
When they called it a I'll tell you, buddy, I
almost wish they would call during the show. I'll take it.
I'm serious, I will take the No, I will, Chris,
I will what. I'm not gonna use any party words
or anything if they called during the show. I'm telling
you right now, I'm taking the phone call and I'm
just gonna give it to him right in front of

(15:36):
the whole country. I might as well at this point
in time, Chris said, he canceled his service. I said
the same thing to Obb yesterday because I was I
was steaming, I said I'm canceling. I'm switching power companies.
And she talked me off the ledge. She said, please
just take a day. That's gonna be a pain to
try to do it. And I just I, well, you're right, Chris,

(15:57):
it's the principle of the thing. But here's the thing.
She me in a moment where I was already feeling
bad about myself for having unloaded in front of the boys,
and so I didn't want to press the issue at
the time, so I kind of just backed away and
I said, you're right, Princess, You're right. I'm just going
to keep them for now. Everything's fine. Everything I couldn't be,

(16:19):
I couldn't couldn't be any common right now. I just please,
in the name of a just merciful gut, you get
somebody who speaks English and customer service. And this is
why I love Pure Talk. By the way, this is
exactly why I obsess over Pure Talk. I swear it's
not just that their CEO is a Vietnam veteran with
two tours. It's not just that they have Americans who

(16:41):
speak English who are in their customer service. I have
spoken to Pure Talk I think four or five times
in my three or four years having Pure Talk. It's
not just great service and great phones and all that
other stuff. I love all that other stuff. It is
a pleasant American I get to talk to every single time.
And I swear they're the last company in the United

(17:01):
States of America that hires Americans who speak English on
customer service. I love you Pure Talk, I swear, Please
don't ever change. I freaking adore you Pure Talk. Thank you,
thank you. Maybe Pure Talk would be my new power company.
I don't think they do that, but if they did,
I would switch right now. I would just to talk
to somebody who speaks freaking English. I'm okay, I'm good now,

(17:27):
Yeah I am Chris. I've never been calmer. By the way,
you can switch to Pure Talk. Dial pound two five
zero and say Jesse Kelly. And guess who you're going
to talk to in English speaker. Because Pure Talk hires Americans,
they prioritize that Pound two five zero, say Jesse Kelly.

(17:47):
Now we'll talk about this attorney general want to be
Attorney general who wants to kill his opponents. Next it
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Monday. I'm
totally calm, Now I've gotten over the customer service thing,
and I feel better. I had to unload that onto you,
and I apologize for venting my frustrations. Now let's talk

(18:10):
about communists wanting us dead, American democrats wanting us dead.
This is going to come back to the Virginia want
to be attorney general. But I wanted to give you
a little bit of understanding, a little bit of historical
reference for what we're dealing with. Have you ever encountered

(18:31):
a democrat in your life, a liberal and paggy in
your life, who will, in one breath talk about how
tolerant she is and how we need to be kind
and tolerant, and in the next breath she will talk
about throwing you in a camp because you didn't get
your fifteenth COVID booster shot. And you, upon listening to this,

(18:54):
have either thought, or maybe you even said to her, well,
that doesn't sound very tolerant. I'm the most tolerant in
the person in the world, and everyone who doesn't think
like me should be shot in the head. The very
seems to be a very common way of thinking in
communist circles. I'm sorry, in democrat circles, doesn't it well,

(19:16):
I thought it might be helpful to give you a
little bit of background on that way of thinking. There
is a term. Maybe you have heard it before, but
I doubt you have. Some people will have. The term
is called liberating tolerance. Liberating tolerance? Where did I get

(19:41):
this term? Where did this term come from? There is
a man German, surprise, surprise, his name is. His name
was Herbert Marcuse, Herbert MARCUSA. I'm sorry, Herbert Marcus is
how you say his name? I believe Herbert marcusa dead.
I don't worry, he's long on. He died back in

(20:01):
nineteen seventy nine. Who was Herbert MARCUSA? Well, he was.
They call him a philosopher. He was a dirty freaking communist,
of course, and he was an academic, all right, an academic. Now.
Sadly he did not stay in Germany. And can we
just pause for a quick second. I love Germany. I've

(20:25):
been there one time. I loved the food. I thought
the people were wonderful. I thought the country was beautiful.
I think they have all kinds of cool history. But
it really is astounding how many murderous ideologies have come
out of Germany. It is really it really is. It's amazing. Anyway,
let's talk about Herbert some more so. He's this, of course, surprise, surprise,

(20:50):
he's an academic. He's a communist, he's one of these times. Okay.
He eventually moves over from the University of Berlin, where
he were, that's where he was educated. He moves to
the University of Frankfurt, which we can talk about, but
he can't keep his poisonous sick mentality there. He of
course has to come over to the United States of America,

(21:13):
to our highest levels of academia. Now pause for a moment.
Pause real quick, I'm going to go to a poll
really quickly. That just came out. This is from American
political perspectives. Okay, if you have a high school diploma
or less, you are half as likely to think that

(21:37):
violence is necessary in politics in America today. If you
are somebody graduated high school, moved on, did something else,
you are half as likely as that person with a
graduate degree to think violence is necessary. What how do

(21:58):
you explain that? Well, let's go back to Herbert. Herbert
taught at places. Maybe you've heard of a couple of
these institutions, Columbia, Harvard, University of California, San Diego, and
others well well known, very popular, and he came up
with this idea of liberating tolerance. Now, I'm going to

(22:22):
read you a couple things. These are his quotes liberating tolerance.
What does it mean? In fact, I'll read the whole thing,
but it's surely the beginning and end that makes the
most sense. Liberating tolerance, then, would mean intolerance against movements
from the right and toleration of movements from the left.

(22:45):
Pause for a second. Let me say that again. Liberating
tolerance would mean intolerance against movements from the right and
toleration of movements from the left. Let me skip down
just a little bit. They would include the withdrawal of
the toleration of speech and assembly from groups and movements

(23:11):
that promote aggressive policies, armament, chauvinism, discrimination on the grounds
of race and religion, or that oppose the extension of
public services, social security, or medicare. I know that was
a lot of academic gobblegook. Let me go ahead and

(23:31):
break it down in ways that this very stupid construction
worker can explain. Liberating tolerance. Real, true, good, righteous tolerance
means this. You must be intolerant of anything on the right,

(23:52):
any group on the right, any idea on the right.
And he even puts it in here withdrawal of toleration
of speech and assembly from groups. A right wing group
should be smashed and should not be tolerated. Right Wing

(24:12):
speech should not be allowed, it should be crushed, it
should not be tolerated. And that is true liberating tolerance.
One other thing I will note about mister Herbert. Herbert
believed in something that we talked about before on this show,

(24:33):
America communism today is what is it? The religion of
the malcontent? It originally was supposed to be about the poor, right,
the urban poor or the rural poor. But how did
it instead become the LGBTQ thing? How did it instead
become this crazy person, that crazy person, this BLM guy,

(24:54):
this feminist. Herbert is one of the early proponents of this.
He said, these were they're not the recruits we want.
We need all the people who are disaffected by society.
We need all the unhappy people who things haven't worked
out for them. Those will be our prized communist recruits. Herbert,

(25:22):
he was one of the leaders in this. And Herbert
was followed by ardent American communists like Angela Davis, who
I know you've heard of before. Liberating tolerance. Your liberal
and Peggy when she talks about how nice and kind
and respectful and tolerant she is, and then in the

(25:46):
next breath she talks about shooting anybody she disagrees with.
She talks about throwing you in a camp, She talks
about all these horrible things, taking your kids away from you.
She doesn't think she's being intolerant. She thinks she's practicing
liberating tolerance, as has been taught to her by our

(26:10):
communists in our society, most definitely in our academic institutions.
Our media believes in liberating tolerance. Our Democrat politicians believe
in liberating tolerance. Our professors teach it to Aiden, Jaden
and Braden when you send them off to Harvard for
fifty thousand dollars a year. And now your liberal aunt

(26:33):
Peggy believes there's nothing wrong with thinking you should be
shot or thrown in prison for your beliefs. For her,
that's true tolerance, that's liberating tolerance, and that brings us
to this scumbag in Virginia. Now it is the Jesse

(26:54):
Kelly Show. On a fantastic Monday. Remember if you miss
any part of the show, you can down though the
whole thing on I Hard Spotify iTunes. I swear I'm
going to get I'm going to get to more emails
at some point in time here, and I'm going to
talk about this judge letting another scumbag run free. And
we're gonna talk about great things like steak and shake

(27:15):
and China attacking us. Actually that's terrible. All that and
more is still to come on the Jesse Kelly Show.
I did want to address this story though, which is
obviously huge. I'm sure you've already heard about it by now.
Jay Jones, he is running to be Attorney General of Virginia.
He is well. He was caught text messaging with a lady,

(27:40):
a Republican and talking about his Republican Republican counterparts like
this quote. These are direct quotes from him. I mean,
I do think Todd and Jennifer are evil and that
they're breeding little fascists. He then says, after the lady says,

(28:02):
you were talking about hoping their children would die, and
he says, and I quote, yes, I've told you this before.
Only when people feel pain personally do they move on policy.
This is that liberating tolerance we were just talking about, by
the way, and a nice little coup de gras here

(28:23):
he talks about peeing on their graves if they die
before him. And then he says, and I quote, three people,
two bullets. By the way, this is the Gilbert family.
Those are the Republicans. Three people, two bullets, Gilbert Hitler
and pol Pot. Gilbert gets two bullets to the head. Now,

(28:47):
it is not in any way you look, you listen
to the Jesse Kelly Show, it's not in any way
a shock to you that a Democrat feels this way.
By now, especially in the wake of Charlie Kirk's assassination
and everything else, you are well aware that this is
main stream Democrat thinking. They are the ultimate liberating tolerance party.

(29:17):
They believe violence your death, the death of their political opponents.
They believe it is an appropriate means to an end.
It is an appropriate means to fight the revolution. This
is how democrats think. Democrats, as we have discussed before,

(29:39):
get quote airfingers quoting this, caught talking like this all
the time. They're always caught talking like this because this
is how they talk. And this is how they talk,
because this is how they think. And every single person
who lives or works in in democrats circles has heard

(30:02):
them speak like this over and over and over again.
I hope he dies. I hope someone kills him. I
hope he gets hit by a car. Democrats are violent people.
They believe violence is necessary for their revolution. You want
to hear it. Quote a man who knows a little

(30:24):
something about communists and how they think. Alexander Sultsanitzen is
his name. You see, he was a guest in the
Soviet gulag system. He watched as those animals murdered and
tortured people, and this is how they thought. Quote. Revolutionaries

(30:47):
are not to be judged by the yardstick of old
fashioned morality. To a revolutionary, everything that contributes to the
triumph of the revolution is moral, and everything that hinders
it is immoral. I have been telling you for seven

(31:07):
years behind this microphone that we are dealing with committed communists,
set aside the idea of democrat, set aside the idea
of liberal. Do those people still exist? Oh, of course
they still exist. They're very very quiet. They're quiet, they're powerless.
They're going along with the herd. Main stream Democrat thought

(31:31):
is that their opponents deserve to die for what they believe.
And by the way, Jay Jones hasn't lost endorsements. I
heard from a lady today. She's interviewing people in Virginia.
She's interviewing democrats. Said she had spoke to over twenty
of them and asked every one of them if they
were bothered by his comments, and not a single one was.

(31:53):
None of them were bothered. Here's the Speaker of the
House in Virginia speaking from a church pulpit. By the way,
so we need to unders stand something. We have to
be mature in out thinking and how we But we
can't get distracted because they want us to get distracted
by the text message here or something else. Stay focused,
stay focused on what well a revolution. Man can't be

(32:16):
worried about some guy who wants to shoot kids. And
what's the big deal?

Speaker 2 (32:20):
Man, We'll fight a revolution, baby.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Some kids are gonna have to die, some people are
gonna have to die. We're fighting a revolution. How sorry
it was Jay Jones. So this, this apology is an
all time.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
A lot of politics is about trust. I can think
of nothing more horrific than a mother having to hold
her dying child. How can Virginians trust a man who
said something so horrific so callously.

Speaker 4 (32:45):
Well, again, I am so deeply, deeply sorry for what
I said, and I wish that it hadn't happened, and
I would take it back if I could.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
I wish that it hadn't happened. That's so great. I'm
gonna out next time OB finds me raiding the kids
fruit snacks. I've done that before. Have I ever told
you that the kids have these incredible little fruit snacks
Ann's Annie's. I don't know. They're supposed to be healthier.
There's no possible way they're healthier. They're like the greatest

(33:15):
little fruit snacks in the world. And I have once
or twice. I don't do this often. I have once
or twice raided the pantry and just destroyed like five
or six bags of them, and ib will come in,
did you eat all the fruit snacks the kids? Did
you eat all the kids fruit snacks? And I'm totally

(33:36):
going I'm totally gonna pull this out verbatim maybe next time.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
A lot of politics is about trust. I can think
of nothing more horrific than a mother having to hold
her dying child. How can Virginians trust a man who
said something so horrific, so callously.

Speaker 4 (33:52):
Well, again, I am so deeply, deeply sorry for what
I said, and I wish that it hadn't happened, and
I would take it back if I could.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
I'm gonna do that next time. Hey, I wish that
it hadn't happened. Man, it happened, but I wish that
it hadn't happened. Democrats keep getting caught talking like this
because this is how democrats think now. The era of
the democrat the liberal is gone. It's gone. The era

(34:26):
of the communist is here. And you can choose to
believe it I'm about to tell you or not. But
it's true. America's Democrats are every bit as vicious and
murderous as any communists whoever walked the streets of the
Soviet Union. They just haven't had the opportunities yet.
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My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

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