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October 2, 2025 29 mins

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On today’s MKD, we get into rumors about Cardi B's BBL, a very suspicious delivery order, the secret to living to 117 years old, a baby who bit off his mom's nipple, and workers near an X-ray center getting sick. 

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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.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
Everyone welcome The Mother Knows Death. On today's episode, we're
going to talk about Carti B addressing the rumors that
her BBL stinks, a delivery app driver who got a
very suspicious order, the world's oldest person, secret to longevity,
a baby who did some serious damage to his mom
while breastfeeding, and a really messed up case involving workers

(00:44):
getting sick at their job. All that and more on
today's episode, Let's get started with Carti B and the
rumor of her stinky BBL.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
Yeah, so, I guess this rumor came out that her
boyfriend said that she stuck like a trash bag. But
then she went on call her daddy and debunked it
and said that she's in a joking way. She said
she was quote really anal about the way she smelled
and her BBL definitely does not stink.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
No, she actually said please the way this ass be eaten, please,
which was kind of amazing. But I feel like we
talked about this. I don't even know. It was over
a year ago that there was rumors going around that
people were saying that girls that had bbl's had a
stinky butt. Remember we talked about it.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
Yeah, because that episode was had an insane amount of downloads,
which made me think that everybody wanted to know. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
So I don't think that there's any scientific material on
that or any reason that it would smell any different
than a person that has, you know, a natural big
butt like that. It's just about practices of hygiene and
cleaning and everything. I don't see what the thing would be,

(01:59):
but a lot of people definitely think that it's a thing.
It's this is like this rumor came up with her,
but we've definitely covered this before, right.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Oh yeah, Well she was also saying in this clip
that she doesn't know where the rumors started popping up
that BBO stick, but hers definitely doesn't. But then it
reminded me of that story. But I guess, like you're saying,
if you have good hygiene practice and everything and you're
on top of it, in theory, should not smell. But
do you think part of it is that people are
not used to having such a different but that they're

(02:29):
just not taking care of it correctly. Yeah, I mean, listen,
the bigger it's it's it's completely not responsible to say
that it's not possible, because let's just not even talk
about a butt. Like if you're a person that gets
heavier and you have creases of skin, then you know

(02:51):
that bacteria and yeese can grow in there and it
could cause an odor sometimes, especially when like when people
have like really large panis, like a large belly or
something like that. Actually, the worst specimen that I smelling
specimen that I've ever received in the lab was from
a person that was really super morbid obese and got

(03:15):
a section of their skin cut off that had this
crazy infection in one of the folds, and it just
smelled so terrible. So if you're not able to reach
around all of the folds of your body and clean properly,
then like that can happen on your belly. So it
can definitely happen in your butt too, and just you know,

(03:38):
you're gonna have an increase of sweating and moisture and
bacteria loves moisture and things like that. But in general, though,
like if you're taking a shower every day and you
could reach all your parts, I feel like it's fine.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Oh yeah, totally all right.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
A delivery driver got an order for garbage bag, zip tize,
bleach and a hatchet and had a bad feeling about it,
so he ended up calling police, and it turns out
he had pretty good intuition because when they got there,
they found out that the guy that ordered it was
holding another person hostage in a motel room.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
I am mind blown that you could order a hatchet
from door Dash. This is like this whole other level
of being a criminal that you're too. Oh you know what,
I forgot. I need this delivered right now. I forgot
all the materials I need to kidnap this person.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
Well, you know, I was Do you ever read these
stories and you're just like, how do people live? Right?

Speaker 1 (04:31):
Yes, it's every single day that we're on the air.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
Actually, well I was wondering too, So I don't It
didn't specify which delivery app it was, so I'm assuming door.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
There's a picture, Yeah, there's a picture of DoorDash, But
I don't know if that was just like a stock
photo or whatever.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
It could have been DoorDash, It could have been Postmates
or something like that, right, Yeah, But I wonder if
you know, you can place an order from home Depot
or Low's like a home improvement store something like you can,
and then in the comment section they wrote hatchet because
I would assume you would not be able to get
a hatchet just delivered to your doorway.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
No, I don't know. I don't know about that. Really
should we look me it up? Yes?

Speaker 2 (05:14):
We should look right, talk about more details of this story.
I'm gonna go a door nash and see what the
possibilities are.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
So so yeah, So the guy shows up and which
is it's kind of interesting that the guy was even
looking at the order to see exactly what items were ordered,
and he dropped. He did give them to the guy,
but then he went right to the manager's office and
he said, I don't know, I don't feel right about this.

(05:42):
And after they were talking about it, they were like,
let's just call police. This is like really ballsy of
these people, because I think a lot of people would
have been like, I don't want to get involved, or
maybe I'm overreacting, but really, why would anybody need a
hatchet in a hotel room?

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Look, you can get it, well, there's two options.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
The thing is is that this is so outrageous. Well,
I don't really know a situation where you ever need
an emergency hatchet. But the whole point of door Dash
and all these is to deliver things to people. Like
maybe there's someone that doesn't have a car and they're
doing yard work right like, or it's for extremely lazy

(06:25):
ork it's for extremely lazy criminals. I think maybe if
these items were getting delivered to a residence, it would
be less suspicious than them getting delivered to a motel room.
It's also just like you know when you go to
the like you go to CBS or Walgreens and you
need to buy like condoms or something, or you want

(06:48):
to buy tampons or something like a more embarrassing purchase.
Right if you get a big box of like the
dildos ied tampons you want to you're like, Okay, I
can't just go up and buy this, Like I have
to add some gum and like maybe I'll get some
makeup and some face lotion or something like that just
to kind of like make it look like, I don't know,

(07:09):
not as embarrassing, Like you were there for other reasons,
not just because you have like a heavy flow. Right,
So they like this guy specifically ordered the only things
that you would use to tie someone up and hold
them hostage. There was no like light bulbs or like
anything else. Nothing. It just was like, I'm committing a
crime here. This is what you would find in someone's trunk,

(07:30):
like tie someone up, cut them up in pieces. Like right,
It's just like he didn't even try to like order
anything to throw them off a little bit that it
could have been something else.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
I mean, total side note. I was on a DoorDash
last night and I just wanted like a piece of
cake or something, you know, just being a total fantass.
And I just typed a dessert in the search bar,
and like the third listing that came up was a
dildo store. I don't understand why it's getting categorized.

Speaker 1 (07:59):
There's still the store that delivers.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
Well. I didn't know this, but when I typed dessert
in the search bar, it came up.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
This is good information to know, all right. I'm just
I'm just saying, you never know you're going to need one,
all right.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
They call the police. The police get there, the man
locked himself in the room. He claimed to have a gun.
They had to get this crisis negotiator involved, and then
the hostage ends up getting out. But he's not innocent either.
Because this hostage because they warn't out for their arrest
and refuse to identify themselves to the police.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Yeah. How truth, it's just scary to think that you're
staying in a hotel room next to people like that. Well,
I think you're something that has to do with it,
wasn't there like something I had to do with drugs
or something?

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Yeah, So the guy ended up getting charged with the
agribated kidnapping and had active warrants for drug offenses. I mean,
I think if you're staying at roadside motels, things like this.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
Are going on quite often.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
Because we just had the decapitation story, yeah, and now
we had this, and I just don't understand what people
are doing in their free time.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
Motels are typically sometimes they're nice, but there's a couple
around here even that they like rent rooms by the
hour and they're just kind of like you just would
never stay there, but when you're traveling, like, how do
you really know which one is like that? Well exactly,
you know. That's why I always I mean, I'm typically
like not a huge chain brand name person, but in

(09:29):
certain situations like that, I am.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
This episode is brought to you by the Gross Room.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
So last week's Forensic Friday was on knife wounds and
how to determine what kind of knife was used. And
we use the Idaho case as an example because we
know that the nice sheaf was found with those bodies,
but we cannot just assume that that is the weapon
that was used, So we kind of go through the
different things that we look for when trying to figure

(10:06):
that out. And I don't know what this week's Forensic
Friday is going to be, so you guys will have
to stay tuned for that. But we also have tomorrow
on our YouTube live we will talk about whatever is
breaking in this whole entire world of death and disease
and dismemorment. So check out the Gross Room for only
five ninety nine a month.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Head over to the grossroom dot com now to sign up.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
All right, so let's talk about this oldest woman alive
and how she's being studied.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
So a paper was published last week which analyzed a
woman who died in twenty twenty four at one hundred
and seventeen years old, hoping to find the secrets behind
her long life. So what did they discover?

Speaker 1 (10:47):
So this was in a journal that's called Cell Reports medicine,
and the title of the article was called multnomics Blueprint
of the Individual with the most extreme life spanned. And
it's really cool because they were going through her genes,
they were going through her metabolism, her microbiome and stuff
by looking at blood, saliva, urine, and stools, and their

(11:12):
conclusions were that she hit both the genetic lottery and
lived a healthy lifestyle. So they thought that she had
really good genes that were not causing her to have
any kind of cancer or anything like that, or any
kind of things that you would see in people as
they get older, like cardiovascular disease and things like that,

(11:33):
Like her body was staying very young even though she
was aging. But on top of that, they had major
things that I think are important for people to hear.
So she ate a pretty Mediterranean diet. She didn't ever smoke.
She never drank alcohol, which which I personally think too
are two huge things. She had a diet that was,

(11:56):
like I said, Mediterranean, that used a lot of olive oil.
But one of the biggest kind of unusual things is
that she ate a lot of yogurt three times a day,
which is way more than most people eat. Of differ
but they think that that might have contributed to her
having a good microbiome. So a microbiome is the bacteria,
the normal bacteria that are living inside of your gut,

(12:19):
and if you have a really healthy one, that is
known to cause there to be less inflammation in your body.
So sometimes when you have yogurt with live active cultures,
it could really keep you regular like that and keep
your bacteria regular. So they think that that could be

(12:39):
the potential why she had such a good microbiome, and
that might be the secret to all of it is
on top of having the good genes, is to eat
a lot of yogurt.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
You know when people start getting to be like eighty
years old and you're like, all right, they probably their
times probably come and do an end. And then she
lived another thirty seven years.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
It's really crazy because she's she was one hundred and
seventeen years old. So in theory she could have had
a kid. She probably did have a kid in their nineties.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
I mean, you know my neighbors who are older that
the guy's mom still alive.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Yeah, it is, it is really, I mean really, if
you think about it, like pop Pop is eighty and
his mom didn't die too long ago, No, only consider
ten years ago. A little bit longer than that, but
not much, maybe twelve because it was the year Lilian
was born. So yeah, I mean that's what I'm saying,
like considering that he's so old, you know, you're just like,

(13:40):
it's it. Sometimes you hear that when people are like, oh,
sometimes someone my age will say like, oh, my grandmom
or something, and I'm like, your grandma's still alive, Like
you know what I mean. It's just it's just funny.
But yeah, that's I mean, she could have had like
great great great grandchildren, right if depending on the she

(14:00):
was when she had her kids in the age that
they were. So it is really and and she was
living a good life. She didn't seem to be ill
or have she was with it, you know, and that
that's just really really cool, No, it is. You know,
we talk about this sometimes because my my grandmother lived

(14:22):
to be almost a hundred and like other Maria's grandparents
lived really long too, the all Italian people, you know,
and but a lot of it, like if I think
about how my grandmom eight and stuff, she she always
had when whenever we went over there to visit, like
she always had fruit on her table. She she seemed

(14:43):
to have. She cooked a lot, she walked a lot,
she didn't drive, just things like that. And this woman too,
she said she didn't really exercise formally, but she walked
about every single day, which is important to do as well.
So it's it's cool, but a lot of it is like,
no matter how good you do that, the jeans are

(15:05):
always going to be a part of it. Oh, totally
all right.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
This mother was breastfeeding her fifteen month old baby and
as he fell asleep, she went to unlatch him, notice
all this blood all over his chin, and then realized
that he accidentally bit part of her nipple off.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
Yeah, she said that it didn't hurt, but it was
hanging off to the point where she called the doctor
and they said, go to the hospital right now. Can
she imagine no? And she went. She went to the
hospital and they said that they didn't think there was
much that they could do for it, and to just
let it heal. And they thought that there is a

(15:42):
possibility that she would have trouble breastfeeding in the future
if scar tissue developed, but they didn't think that it
was going to heal. You know that they thought it
would heal.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Okay, So I guess my question is someone that doesn't
have kids is like, went, when are you supposed to
stop breastfeeding them? Because like, like in my mind, it
would be before they had teeth, so they couldn't do
something like this, or I would imagine it hurts when
they have teeth.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
It hurts anyway, like just just an FYI, but when
you start at least but this kid had five teeth already,
I think she said, right, twelve twelve? Yeah, oh yeah.
But the thing is, you're going to be shocked when
I tell you what. So there's no recommendation at all

(16:37):
for what age you should stop breastfeeding. They say that
you should try to go for a year, but there's
no age that says to stop. And they actually said, wait,
hold on, I want to see what particular associations said
this American Academy of Family Physicians. You're gonna be mind
blown when I tell you this. They say that the

(16:58):
normal age to wean off a child between two and
seven years old. Seven.

Speaker 2 (17:03):
Yes, if the kid could ask for if they should
not be doing it.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
No, that's that's not true. They they tell you that's
why they don't even give a number because they're like,
when your kid's ready, they don't they don't care.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
A seven year old is in school.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Yeah, like in second grade or third grade, right seven?
Like I do you believe this? No, Listen, people breastfeed
in other countries, like way longer than here. Most people,
Like I just wanted with the girls to be to say, okay,
I got to a year and I did with both
of them, and then I was I would at that point,

(17:41):
especially because I had Lilian and then I got pregnant.
So I was breastfeeding Lillian up until I got pregnant
with Lucia, and then I was pregnant with her and
then breastfeeding her, Like I just wanted my body back
after that. So it was a full year for each one,
and plus I was working full time and it just
was very difficult to pomp in this and that. So

(18:03):
I got to a year with both of them and
was happy with that. I just can't believe this, but
people do. My mom breastfed me till I was two
and a half, which is which is too Yeah, I
always say that that it was too long, But there's
children that definitely get breastfed until they're five six seven
years old.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
That is insane to me. I don't know. Do you
think a large part of it though, is don't women
lose a lot of weight when they do it? So
do you think that has something to do with it?

Speaker 1 (18:33):
No? I think people just like the bond with the kids.
I mean I don't. And honestly, when you're breastfeeding, when
you're breastfeeding when it's necessary for the kid, like up
until six months old because they can't eat solid food,
that's when you burn a lot of calories. But I
think once, especially if you're a breastfeeding a kid that's

(18:55):
seven years old, it's like you're doing it at night
for them to fall asleep. It's not burning much calories,
you're not making much milk, and it's not even towards
the end, as soon as Lilyan and Luccia they were
eating food and stuff, it was like I wasn't really
nursing them as much anymore, and it just wasn't the
same as like when I was in the thick of
it and my boobs were like filling up like bowling

(19:16):
balls every couple hours, and it was just insane, Like
that's when you're really burning all the calories.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
I can't get over the seven years old. I mean,
at what point does the doctor have to step in
and be like you need to stop. They won't step in,
but I feel like at some point it's like borderline
child abuse, like it's way too bad.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
They don't think that though they don't. That's why they
don't even put in age where they're like you can
consider this. Instead they put a range like yeah, it
should be between two and seven.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
Like two is kind of old to me, Like seven
skin leave this. Somebody listening will be a person or no,
somebody that's gone till that long.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
But I know it is. It is crazy because it's
like your kid is going to school, and if your
kid even said that out loud, they would get beat up.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
What I mean, well, if you were an adult and
you met somebody that was like I was breastfed until
I was seven, you'd be like that's weird.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
Yeah, it, but it's you have to understand that that's
our culture. Like our culture is getting better, for sure,
But there was a period of time where when you
were a baby, for example, that people were not into
breastfeeding as much, and it got bottle feeding became more
popular and people didn't want to do it in public,

(20:34):
and now it's starting to come back and people still
get butt her if someone's breastfeeding in public or something
like that. I never gave a shit because I'm just like,
my kid needs to eat. I don't care, like I'm
not I'm not gonna hide under this blanket and put
my kid. Remember I used to put Lillian under that
thing for a minute and it just was like she
was like flopping underneath of it. No, but there.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
I mean, it obviously does bother me at all if
people are feeding in public. But there certainly are exhibitionist
mothers that pull their entire shirt off in the middle
of like a coffee shop, and you're like, okay, you
don't need the way to surely do it. Yeah, you
don't even have to discreetly do it. But there's definitely
I've seen people in public.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
I just I think I've seen people with all of
these like the special bra and the special shirt and
the wrap and this and that, and I'm like, dude,
you're bringing more attention to it. Just pull your nip
out real quick and stick it in the kid's mouth
and get it over with and pull it out like
it's just it just doesn't need to be that big
of a deal.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
No, totally, And that's what I'm saying, Like, there's the
people that are comfortable doing that and it doesn't even
bother me if, like I see a nip in public, right,
But there's like totally people that are just like, look
at me, and they'll have their boobs out for like
five minutes before the kid's there, and you're like, Okay,
you need to chill out. But it's an interesting thing
to think about, all right. Back in twenty twenty three,

(21:58):
and imaging center open and St. George, Utah in a
building next to a diabetes clinic, and not long after that,
employees in the diabetes clinic all started getting sick, only
to realize that radiation was coming from the office next door.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
This story is so messed up, really, so they figured
and it's really cool that they that they figured this out.
I mean, obviously everybody at work is sick, right, so
they're just like, Okay, something is wrong here. And they
were having symptoms like headaches, nausea, dizzyness, fatigue, drowsiness, and
one person had even gotten diagnosed with cancer. So I

(22:35):
guess when there's a So this is a diabetes center
and next door to it is the place that's doing
CT scans. So they are supposed to put up this
special drywall that goes in between the buildings that has
led in it to prevent radiation from coming through the walls,
and they didn't use that drywall. It seems like the

(22:56):
company might have requested a construction company to use it
and even paid for it and said it's like time
ten times more money than regular drywall, but the construction
company didn't use it. So I mean, I don't really
know that you truly understand the implications of this, Like
just because these people were having sickness right now, they

(23:19):
have to worry about this for the rest of their
life because of the amount of radiation they were exposed
to and will likely show up with cancer at some
point in their life because of it. Yeah, I mean, because.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
Wasn't it a full year before they figured out what
was happening.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
It was a full year. But let me tell you.
Let me tell you about the testing they found. So
normally the rules are the state rules say that people
in businesses like this, members of the public are supposed
to be exposed to a maximum of zero point one
r EM per year, right, and they found the testing

(23:54):
adjacent to this X ray room was zero point forty
four r EM. Now, they said if someone was exposed
to that level of radiation in the hallway for five
days a week during every exam performed, their annual exposure
would be more than seven point nine r EM. So
they're saying a person should have that's considered to be

(24:18):
safe exposure of radiation zero point one, and these people
may have been exposed to as high as seven point nine.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Okay, So I guess my question is I understand they're
trying to like point blame at the construction company for
taking the money for the lead based drywall and not
using it, But are there not inspections in between this time?
Because they're saying after they speculated their radiation that they
cut a hole in the wall and saw that there
was in fact no lead in there, so was an
inspection not done? Because I would think if you had

(24:49):
this state mandate that any imaging centers had to have
this special drywall, that they would have to inspect that
it was actually put in place.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
Yeah, I mean, I guess once these lawsuits go through,
they're definitely going to be able to figure out what happened.
It's just like we talk about with every single story,
they're supposed to be checks and balances along the way
to prevent things like this from happening. But I mean,
one person already has cancer. I guarantee you more people

(25:18):
are going to end up having cancer from this. It's
so terrible because there's nothing you can do about it.
There's nothing you just the more radiation you're exposed to,
the more your DNA can change, and the more you
have an increased risk of cancer. And it's just like
they just have to sit here and wait now and
never know if it's going to pop up or not.

(25:39):
And it's and it's scary too because it's invisible, you
don't see it happening to you, and just against your
will like that for all that time and not knowing
what it was. It's just so irresponsible. And even like,
let's say you can sue them for millions of dollars,
but you end up getting cancer when you're twenty five

(26:00):
or thirty years old and die from it, what's the
money do for you?

Speaker 2 (26:04):
Well? Yeah, and they're saying twenty seven people were exposed,
including three children, So yeah, those little kids. I mean,
think about it, they're young.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
I know, it's just so it's such a terrible story.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
I just guess I never even thought about that in general,
when you go to a place like that, you know,
even the employees not getting exposed. But these are why
these laws are set in place.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
Yeah, and that's why how many times, like I go
to the dentist with the kids, or any time you
go to something like that and MRI or something, they
always make the person get out of the room, right, They're.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
Always just like we were at the er and they
gave that person an X ray right next to us.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Yeah, that was that was actually weird. But I don't
know what the deal is with those kinds of machines,
but that was weird though, that they gave some they
had a portable X ray machine and gave someone an
X ray right next to us, And I was just
kind of like, oh, do we have the option of
not standing here and having exposure to radiation? But don't.
I don't know how those things work. It was probably wrong,

(27:09):
but who knows, maybe someone listening could tell us that.
But yeah, like that's why when I, like, when I'm
at the dentist with the kids, for example, they're just
kind of like, okay, they put that apron, the light
apron on the kid, and then they're like, can you
step out of the room. And you know, there's a
reason that they do that kind of stuff, and just
to think that they were unknowingly exposing people to radiation

(27:31):
at those levels, it's just so messed up. It's horrible.
All right, guys.

Speaker 2 (27:36):
Tomorrow night we're going to be at the Wildlife CSI
had Lake Tobias Wildlife Park in Halifax, Pennsylvania. And then
on the twelfth, we're going to be at the Keeping Hope,
a live golf Classic sponsoring the golf carts. And then
the following weekend, on the eighteenth, we're going to be
at Dark Side, New Jersey in Edison.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
Awesome, see you guys there. Bye. Thank you for listening
to Mother Knows 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

(28:14):
dead or alive without the assistance of a licensed medical doctor.
This show, my website, and social media accounts are designed
to educate and inform people based on my experience working
in pathology, so they can make healthier decisions regarding their
life and well being. Always remember that science is changing

(28:35):
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

(28:59):
Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or anywhere you get podcasts.
Thanks

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