Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Dead starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Everyone, Welcome to Mother Knows Death. On today's episode, we're
going to talk about a man who did the unthinkable
to prove that his sister was really dead, the horrific
details of a true crime case that have just come
out about a man who killed his mother and tried
to flush her body parts down the toilet. Then we'll
talk about biohacker Brian Johnson's girlfriend's vagina, and something that
(00:38):
seems to be happening every week on this show that
involves things that people should not be eating that is
in our food, our drinks. So all that and more
on today's episode. All right, all right, this case in
India is out of control.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
We showed this video on YouTube live on Friday and
nobody could believe it. But a guy in India's sister died.
He was trying to make withdrawals from her bank account.
The bank said the account owner had to come in
to sign. He told them she died. They didn't believe him.
They just wanted proof. I think they probably meant via death.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
Certificate or something.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
But he took it to a new extreme and he
exhumed her body and then walked her through the down
and brought her corpse into the bank.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
Yes, so you see this guy just walking through a town.
I mean it looks super rural, like, yeah, it's not
just like a typical town you would think of in
the United States. But he just has this dead, stiff
body over his shoulder and is just walking up the
street and people are recording it. I mean they have
(01:46):
they have phones there with recording devices, so it's not
super primitive, and you're just looking at it like, Okay,
this guy is a little unhinged, I think. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
I think they ended up proving that he was like
like illiterate and not all the way there, and the
cops were called on him. Obviously it's a pretty shocking
thing to do, but they've decided they weren't gonna press charges.
The cops ended up helping him make the withdrawal from
the bank account. It was only for about two hundred
US dollars, so it wasn't like a crazy amount. It's
just it's really sad to see, you know. And I
(02:20):
think if they were like, we need proof that she
died and he just couldn't understand what that meant and like,
obviously a regular person would not go to the extreme
length of digging up their dead relative and bringing their
body in.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
And we had that.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
Case before where that woman did that, brought a dead
guy into the bank to try to like steal money
from him.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Yeah, it was on those lines, but I feel like
a little bit more innocent in this case totally. We
have another case that's posting in the grossroom this week,
a video that I found that is just again happening
in India. And sometimes you see these videos and you're
just like, this is actually happening in this same exact
(03:03):
time period in another part of the world, and you
just can't believe the difference of how some people are
living and what's considered not normal. Obviously people didn't think
that this was normal, but not I mean, that's just
something that you just wouldn't see here ever, probably so.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Well, it really is interesting from a history perspective to
just look how like different cultures evolve over time, and yeah,
like it's shocking sometimes to see things like that and
other cultures, but it is also fascinated to see like
the very quick progression over here and then the slow
progression or like the I don't want to say refusal
(03:43):
to adopt Western culture, because obviously everybody has their own
culture and they should embrace that, but just like how
different they are between the two.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
Yeah, it's it's really interesting, all right.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Last month, Mississippi police got a call to do a
welfare check on this retired teacher. They walked in on
her so trying to flush her dismembered remains down the toilet.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
So the police said that they heard like splashing sounds
and went and found him in the bathroom and said
that there was black stuff in the toilet.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
Yeah, they were like, there was a quote, black substance
in the toilet that didn't look like any type of
excrement they had ever seen.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
So so I mean when they realized and said it's
a head, it's a head, I'm assuming it was just
like I mean, think about if you put a human
head into a toilet, it's not fitting down the hole.
So was it like hair that they were saying, like
the top of someone's head.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
I actually think they found her head on another area
of the property, but at this like at the same time,
so like they they saw him flushing clearly body parts.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Oh okay, I sound another cop was screaming, it's a head,
it's a head.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
Yes, So I think they walked in on him flushing
obvious human remain down the toilet, and then it prompted
others on the scene to go search the perimeter of
the property and that's when they found the head elsewhere.
So then they had to get a plumber to come
lift the toilet up, and in there they found like
her tissue, other chopped up body parts and everything. And
(05:16):
her son, her youngest son, killed her and did this.
And her older son is the one that requested the
welfare check. So I can't imagine what's going on in
this family.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Well, I mean, I'm sure he's got some kind of
he could have some kind of underlying mental illness.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
I mean, I would hope so, because who else could
do something like this, because it's so horrible.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
Well, we believe it or not, we have. I believe
we have more than one case in the gross room
of fat. And it's it's really interesting too, because it's
it's a son that's killing a mother or a daughter
that's killing a mother, of dismembering them and trying to
put them down the toilet. And there's photographs of it.
(06:01):
It's really really disturbing. We need to talk to a
plumber because they probably we've had cases recently of like
a plumber finding a fetus in the in the toilet
that was clogged and things like that, like they see
some crazy shit. Yeah, I guess because people that are
committing crimes are like sticking stuff down the toilet, right.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
I need like Confessions of the Cleaning Staff from Las Vegas.
That's the book I want most, and then like Secrets
Revealed for Blumbers, you know, like just all the weird
things behind the scene people find.
Speaker 3 (06:36):
I am interested in.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
That well, like in a plumber, Like a plumber isn't
a plumber isn't mentally trained to deal with something like that,
Like no, you're getting a call, just hey, the cops
are here and we want you to come over here
and to go in there and see something you likely
have never seen in your life, which is a dead person.
And then on top of that, they're being blood and
(06:59):
I just think about like bone tissue, anything that's like
jammed in these pipes. I mean that could really be
like a PTSD situation for a plumber. I imagine.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
Yeah, I like, do you think when the cops call
in a person like that, they have to disclose, like, hey,
you might see something really disturbing, so send somebody over
that you think could handle it the best.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
I'm sure. I'm sure they do because otherwise forensic forensic plumbers,
I don't.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
I mean, there's going to be if people come back.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Yeah, it's just like I'm curious because somebody, I mean,
this happened in the United States. Somebody, somebody knows somebody
that went to the plumbing at this scene.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
So like my husband at one time had worked for
that company that does like clean you know, they do
like all the different types of cleanups, but there was
like a special branch of it that did crime scene cleanup.
But like they didn't just send like everybody that worked
at that place out on the It was like a
special unit of people that could handle doing it.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
Yeah, I mean, it's just it's just different. Like if
you go you know, when you're when you're doing all tops,
so you're going to the medical examiner's office every day,
like it's still disturbing to see a person that's dismembered,
but you're like, all right, whatever, I signed up for this,
and this is like this is just like another dead
person that I've seen a hundred times, but like that,
(08:24):
that's just like yeah.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
So they said some of her remains were in the
toilet somewhere in a suitcase, and he has been charged
with first and second degree murder in addition to tampering
with physical evidence. So he's also been charged with may Yeah,
what is that?
Speaker 1 (08:41):
I'm like, what is that? I know, I just thought
that it was finn.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
I just skipped over that. I was like, did I
just make a type who I've never heard that?
Speaker 1 (08:48):
No, I read it in two different articles, so I
just am like, okay, whatever, that is murder and mayhem. Yeah,
they and they also haven't released on like how she died.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
No motive, not necessarily how she died.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
Yeah, so, and I guess they're still doing an investigation
to find that out, and they could likely I mean,
they're gonna look at all the body parts and see if.
I don't know if they said even how long that
she was dead, well was she recently dead?
Speaker 2 (09:19):
Or maybe he'll pull up Brian Walsh and'd be like,
well she died naturally.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
And I just freaked out. So then I just had
to cut her up.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Well exactly and that's what. So they'll they'll have to
do toxicology and also they're gonna just like look at
the margins and stuff of the bone. So one of
one of the crazy cases that we have in the
grosser room is this woman that killed her mother and
then cut her head off, and and I show you
guys like what they look at at autopsy. So when
(09:47):
you're looking at her head, you could actually see that
the edges of the wound where her head was cut off,
there's a lot of evidence that she was still alive,
like in her heart was still beating when her head
was cut off, and when all these stab Yeah, it's
really terrible. So I just show you guys, like at
(10:08):
all autopsy, like what we would look forward to determine
stuff like that. So it's disturbing though, all right, but
she was the daughter was like had a history of
schizophrenia or something like.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
Well, that makes sense because people like that aren't in
their right mind.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
They're having like hallucinations.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
They don't they're not they're totally disconnected from reality. Yeah,
so like if it came out that this guy did too,
I'd be like, Okay, that makes sense, not that it's
justifiable at all, but like you under you just gotta
understand it more why it happened the way it did.
But if it's like just some sick freak did it,
Like I think about Brian Walsh in a case like this,
because he's not somebody that's diagnosed with schizophrannia, but still
(10:47):
did it, like still cut up his wife.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
Well yeah, I mean people people do that. It's it's
gonna be the same thing with this with this David guy,
Like yeah, I mean like he doesn't not to say.
I mean, he's in the age range of that starting
to happen, but you're not hearing anyone say like we've
been telling him to get mental health tream and like
something was going on with him. He seemed like he
(11:11):
was having hallucinations. I mean, like, listen, that trial is
gonna just be really interesting because who knows what they're
gonna how they're gonna try to get him out of it.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
I know, I am interested to see the defense. Okay,
biohacker Brian Johnson is bragging about his girlfriend's privates and
declaring she's in the top one percent of Vagina's.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
This guy just is cy annoys. He he is cringe
and he annoys the shit out of me. And I
I was on X recently and came across his post
that just said it said something like, oh just gave
Kate oral sex. So he and I'm like, what, Like,
I you know that I have this theory that people
(11:54):
that are talking about sex all the time are just
like not having sex. It's like a theory I've had
my whole life, and that screams it. Screams it to me, like, oh, okay,
you're telling everybody that you finally had sex. Yeay?
Speaker 2 (12:07):
Like no, This, on the opposite end, confirmed my theory
that scientists and nerds are sex freaks, because he like
posted about giving her oral and then followed it up
with her sample is dominated by the single most protective
bacterial species of vagina could host. Like, you guys are
all freaks in the lab. Sorry you too much.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Now, I disagree. I think that like he's he like it,
never has it. That's why he's I don't think that
he's like kinky or weird in the bedroom at all.
I just think he's like a dork. I think this
is like as in celebrate and all over it kind
of thing.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
Comments on this were unmatched. First quote this man just
posted his girlfriend's pussy stats like a quarterly earnings report.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
Quote.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
This is type of This is the type of shit
and in so would say after landing first possy, it's psychotic.
Speaker 1 (13:01):
Be that's exactly what I think.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
The quote coochie Carfex.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Yeah, so apparently she's got so when you have when
you're thinking about your vagina, it's not just your vagina too,
it would be like your bowels or anything that holds
bacteria in the body. There's there's a certain balance. It's
called flora. It's normal bacteria that's present, and there's a
certain balance that you would say, this is prior to him,
(13:29):
just like in general, you would say, if you have
more of this than it prevents you from having like
yeast infections and things like that. That's why they're telling you,
like eat yogurt and things like that, because it's supposed
to increase your lactobacillis in your vaginal flora. It keeps
like that's the perfectly balanced vagina, you would say, and
(13:51):
then different things cause it to get off balance, one
of which is just hormones, you know, different things like
that and infection. So you could get so I like
who Like, It's just he's been known to say, Oh,
I don't know if I'm ever gonna be able to
be with a woman because of my rigid lifestyle. So
he just found like an equal dork to be like, oh, like,
(14:16):
doesn't he have children, Like I'm just gonna I'm just gonna. Yeah.
Didn't he do something we talked about on this show.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
Thing with his son where he like put a device
on his teenage son's genitals to monitor like his erection
rate or something. I remember because it was disgusting.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
It's it's it's just like, I don't know, it's just
a tension seeking to me.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
Like, and somebody like this that works so hard to
try to reverse aging and everything is the type of
person that gets like run over by a car suddenly,
Like all the work you've just done was for absolutely nothing.
Speaker 3 (14:49):
It just makes no sense.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
This episode's brought to you by The Grossroom.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
Guys, we only do this a few times a year,
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(15:40):
on her when she first died and some ideas that
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stories that have to do with GLP one drugs that
we're talking about this week on Mother Knows Death, a
couple of really shocking videos that I have posted in
(16:04):
the gross room. We talked about the one case this
week of that happened in India that is really outrageous
and also Haunt of virus we're talking about in episodes
this week, so Gene Hackman's celebrity death to section and
believe it or not, there are other children that have
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(16:26):
parents and tried to shove them in a toilet, So
we have a couple cases of that. Hopefully my daughter
won't want to do anything like that to me. All
that and more in the gross Room twenty.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
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Speaker 1 (16:51):
I guess there is something to what he does, just
don't I personally don't like it. I don't like the
idea of being hooked up to devices all the time,
Like my husband uses that like anise. It just annoys
the shit out of me. Like like trust me, I've said.
(17:12):
I'll say to him, like, how'd you sleep last night?
And oh, I don't know. I didn't look yet. And
I'm like, you don't just have an idea in your
head of like how you slept. You have to look
at some stat to see how you slept last night,
like I don't know. And then I showed him actually
that there's all these studies that have been done that
said that if people wake up and look how they
(17:34):
slept and they didn't sleep, well, it automatically They've done
studies to show that that automatically makes you less productive
throughout the day, as if if you just didn't look
at all, like it puts this preconceived notion in your
mind that you're gonna have a bad day because you
read that you didn't sleep well and your recovery rate
isn't as good. So then he said, yeah, I've read
(17:56):
that a while ago, and I stopped checking until later
in the day, and it's just it's so it's I
don't know, it's just something that like for Gabes particular reasons,
I do enjoy that he that he does look at
that kind of stuff because it's very important when it
comes to firefighting especially and just knowing how your body
(18:21):
reacts in a situation of high stress. I mean, you
have to think that sometimes, you know, my husband works
a twenty four hour shift and sometimes they have a
busy day and then they go to bed and you're
dead asleep, and then you get a call of a
person trapped in a building and you have to go
from like being dead asleep to the heightened level of
performing under a situation where your life's in danger and
(18:45):
you're trying to save someone else's life. So I think
it's good to look at the metrics of what's happening
to your body during those situations, for sure, but like
it just becomes annoying when people are doing it all
the time.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
Yeah, Like my or ring last night said I slept
my sleep where it was like eighty five, like something
pretty high, And I'm like, I know for a fact
that's totally lying. I slept like shit last night. I
woke up like four times to pee. I have a
six pound baby in my stomach kicking all my organs.
Like I barely slept. My hand was completely nun when
I woke up, I couldn't fall asleep for a thirty minute.
(19:18):
I'm like, there's just no way I slept that. Well,
did you have to tell that thing you were pregnant?
Speaker 3 (19:24):
Yeah? I did.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
So there might be like a totally different, totally different
stats for their likely is of like what is considered
to be good or whatever for that and like why do.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
You use it?
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Like what's the point?
Speaker 2 (19:39):
Well, I use it to monitor my sleep and my
stress level and my heart rate because I am interested
in it. But there are times where I'm just like
this just can't be accurate, Like, you know, I don't
use it.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
I hated it so bad. I did it for a
couple weeks and then I just was like, this is
like it's like telling you like you're a piece of shit,
kind of like you don't sleep and off you're not rested.
It Like I just I'm like, I don't need and
I also like there I always feel that there's you know,
I'm like kind of antiphone a lot of the times,
like I don't need to be connected to technology at
(20:13):
all times, Like I'd like to have some parts of
myself that are just for me and that like aren't
for the rest of the world to be looking at
my my metrics and things like that.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
I primarily wanted to get it a couple of years
ago because I had been doing temperature based birth control
and so every morning I had to wake up and
take my temperature with a thermometer and put it into
an app. So the or ring ended up partnering with
the app, so then I just could it would just
automatically sink in every day, which at the time I
(20:46):
was trying to get pregnant. I didn't know how severe
my endimetrios. I mean, I knew how severe my endometrios.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
I suppose but I know it was making me infertile.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
So like at the time when I was trying to
track my ovulation and everything, I found it to be
very useful, but like I kind of don't need that
anymore person Like, for it's it's good to tell it.
You don't have to tell it you're pregnant, but it's
stupid to not because like it adjusts it based on
those factors. Because the first people I read online people
(21:15):
were like, it's inconclusive whether the or ring could detect
if you're pregnant or not, but one sign is that
your temperature rises significantly in the days leading up to
when you could have a positive pregnancy test, And I
did find that to be true in my situation.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
One thing that's really cool about what I learned from
games too, because he talks about it all.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
And he's so annoying with the because he talks about
like he's like, yeah, my thing is like at this percent,
I'm like, I don't know what that means, like.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
This this is typical like so so so anyway, though,
I like I used to tell him all the time,
like how bad alcohol was. Right, I've always been the
same as I've always been, right and it wasn't until
so if we would go out to dinner, he would
just get like a Scotch drink, right, And then he
(22:07):
started noticing when he went to bed that night, like
his his sleep was just like completely disrupted. His sleep
score was way off and stuff. And then he finally
was like, oh my god, like you're right, it really
does affect your whole body, like my heart rates this
and this and you know. And I'm like, yeah, what
do you think you needed this whoop.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
To tell you that his life with the Masters and
science to tell.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
So whatever now, I mean, like he doesn't he won't
even do that anymore. Like if we go out to dinner,
it's just kind of like all right, like I would
maybe I would like to have a drink just to
like relax or whatever, but like it's not worth what
happens that I don't, you know. And he looks at that.
So then he's like, I don't function right the next day,
and I'm like, yeah, duh, Like I've been telling you
(22:54):
that forever. But so at least like now he believes
some of the stuff that I've been telling him this
whole time.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
All right in Wisconsin, several McDonald's customers were shocked when
they found worms in their drinks.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
This is like an extra gross story really. So this guy,
there's a whole video of one of the people that
was effected by this getting interviewed, and he went to
the drive through and like sucked up a frickin' like
multiple worms in the drink that he got from McDonald's.
And when they called the health department, cause apparently it
(23:31):
wasn't even him, it was like someone else posted it
on a Facebook group page and a bunch of people
were like, oh my god, that happened to me too.
So the Department of Health goes in, and then the
person that was working there was like, yeah, we've been
having a problem with this sewage pipe or whatever that's
right near the soda fountain machine, which I don't know
(23:52):
if that's a normal thing or not, but like it
was leaking and there was like a flood and this
and that, and somehow they determined that there was this
cross contamination with the line and the water that was
coming out for the fountain soda versus the sewage. So
they're like literally sewage worms that are in this fountain
(24:15):
soda at this McDonald's sewage worms.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
This is absolutely unacceptable. I mean the system should not
be anywhere near each other that this is even a
possibility something like this could happen. I before they said
they found that it was a sewage problem, I was like,
I don't know the worms are getting in there per se,
but I don't think a lot of restaurants in general
understand the importance of cleaning these soda machines out.
Speaker 3 (24:40):
You have to do it all of the time. They
get so disgusted.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
Yeah, but it's not like, you know what, that would
be the best case scenario here. It's like if it
was this is like they're saying that this is like
which I think this is what it is a sludgeworm
or a tube effects worm because they're red. They had
a very specific look like when you look at them.
Because that was my first thought. I was like, all right, well,
(25:04):
like my hands are digging in the dirt in the
backyard all the time, Like what kind of worms are these?
Because it's not an earthworm, it's not like any kind
of a slug or anything like that. Like they're very
specific looking, but like thin and red.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
I was like, this looks like somebody's throt like fishing
bait in these.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
It says these are thin, reddish worms that could live
in an oxygen poor dirty water with lots of organic material.
They are common in sewage content containment and sludge. Their
red color comes from hemoglobein like pigments that help them
survive in low oxygen like ew. Seriously, like and and
that guy you could tell that the guy that had
(25:40):
this experience is bothered by it because especially because it's sewage,
because you're just like, all right, well, if so like
put two and two together. If you're eating that, you're
also eating other people's shit, That's what it's saying. Yeah,
Like it's it's disgusting, and like what happens. These are
these weird cases where it's not enough to see McDonald's,
(26:02):
what do you want a gift card? You never want
to eat there again? And and like you're just beat
but you're also like mentally traumatized by this because it's
it's so gross.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
You know, it's actually so much worse knowing that it's
a sewage worm than just having like a cockroach or
something pop in your drink.
Speaker 1 (26:21):
And not to mention like this is this is a
serious concern because then you're talking. I mean, if it's
sewage that is coming through a pipe that's from the
restaurant that people are going to the bathroom, right, it's
not treated like you're talking about raw sewage, Like the
(26:42):
untreated sewage, you're like viruses and bacteria, Like you can
get really sick from that too.
Speaker 3 (27:04):
So if you were to.
Speaker 2 (27:05):
Get sick, is that something you think would present immediately?
Like do you think if this just happened in the
last couple of weeks, these people are in the clear
at this point where it's like something they have to
monitor long term.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
Well, I mean they can, I mean, they can get
a kind of hepatitis that way, but I mean like
if they had a bacterial infection, they would know it
by now. But I mean it's just there could be
parasites no, I mean not necessarily pop up right away.
Speaker 3 (27:30):
This is so disgusting.
Speaker 1 (27:31):
I mean, just think about anything that any person shits
inside of a McDonald's. Like, it's just it is, it's
it's so it's just completely unacceptable. Really.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
So in other food news, well, I really hope nobody's
eating while listen.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
This is just like all the time.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
So in other food news, this woman ordered a couple
bags of rice from Amazon. She opened one at first
and dumped it into a container, and then she noticed
these moths flying around in her apartment that she said
she never noticed before. And then eventually she goes over
to this container where she dumped the rice, opens the lid,
and the same moth flies out of the rice in
(28:11):
the container. So then she looks in the unopened bag
she has and sees things moving around in there as well.
So this one, I don't think is.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
That as disturbing because it's like I told you one time,
I got a broccoli that was in one of those
like zip sealed bags and there was a maggot in there,
and it's just kind of like, all right, well, like
this thing's coming out of a field. You have to
be like a little bit. It's the same what story
(28:43):
we talked about with was that in the grosser room
where we were talking about that there was a cricket
inside of a salad.
Speaker 2 (28:48):
Yeah, that was on a YouTube line.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
Yeah, so like you're just like, but there's there's crickets
outside or grasshoppers outside or whatever, like certain things should
like they shouldn't be there. They should be checked. But
like if you have a larva, and you know it's possible.
This actually happened to me once when I was a
little kid. I was making cream a wheat or something,
(29:11):
and I poured it into the bowl and there was
just like a bunch of it looked like they were dead.
They weren't alive, but like when you have the larva
from from a moth, it's like a maggot looking, you know,
they're like a little crunchier. Though usually it looked like
the shells of like those types of little worms, like
(29:34):
they were alive. At some point they all died and
it was like their little exoskeletons. They're kind of clearly
arezed by this though, because after that salad story, I
didn't at it to get that salad place for lunch,
and I'm like, I'm not really interested. Yeah, but it's
a grasshopper, Like who cares people eat grasshoppers?
Speaker 3 (29:54):
I know.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
I just if you're eating lettuce and there's a grasshopper,
I just I'm just kind of like that doesn't make
me feel like the restaurant's dirty at all, because like
it's not a roach, it's a grasshopper, Like it came
from the field where the stuff was taken from. It's yeah,
nobody gets natural grasshopper outbreaks and restaurants. Like if it
(30:15):
was a black roach, I'd be like, f no, this
is disgusting, like or a brown roach with like I don't.
Speaker 2 (30:20):
Know, didn't you guys have a cock or a grasshopper
infestation and mob mom and Bop Hop's old house.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
Or crickets That's what I was thinking of.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
There was a lot of crickets there, but because that's.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Like kind of a weird bug to have a bunch
of in your house.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
It's I don't know, I just like I don't skive
bugs the way most people do. But there's like certain
bugs that are like what I consider clean bugs, like
a grasshopper or a cricket. They're like normal house bugs
or those I don't even know what those other ones
are called sprickets, those like cricket things I hate.
Speaker 3 (30:56):
They're so disgusting.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
They're not they're not like dirty, but they just.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
Jump on you and they come out of nowhere and
you're not prepared for you yet.
Speaker 1 (31:05):
I don't. I don't like them for sure. But then
there's ones that are like like roaches, Like no, really,
they're they just gross. They're so gross and flies too. Honestly,
flies are seriously so gross, Like ever since I rotated
at the Medical Examiner's office, and just like all the
maggots and the flies and then it just like really,
(31:26):
flies just always grossed me out because you're like, oh,
that thing just landed on my food? Was it just
on a dead body? Like? Was it just on poop?
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
So Amazon said they were gonna give her three hundred
dollars for the inconvenience and she'd get it within seven
business days. She never got it, and then she went
to the news, and then after it aired on the news,
they gave her that plus one hundred dollars gift card.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
Yeah, I mean, I don't know. I feel like that's
that's kind of nice of them, actually, because like that's
a natural. It's just disturbing, and they just want to
like push it under the rug with They didn't even
really have to do that.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
No, all right, Please head over to Apple or Spotify
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at mothernosdeath dot com.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
See you, guys, Thank you for listening to Mother NOO's
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
(32:31):
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 every day and the
(32:51):
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,
(33:12):
and subscribe to Mother Knows Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube,
or anywhere you get podcasts. Thanks