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June 13, 2025 57 mins
In this episode of Tales, Trails and Taverns, Rob recounts an intense and deeply personal urban exploration experience inside the abandoned Memorial Hospital in Pawtucket, Rhode Island—a place he hadn’t set foot in since 2005.
What started as a trip down memory lane turned into a high-stakes adventure, as Rob shares the hospital’s dark history, the slow decline that led to its closure, and ghost stories whispered by fellow urban explorers.
From flickering shadows to chilling cold spots, this is one place that leaves a mark. But here’s the warning: do not go. Unknown security measures and real risks make this a “do as I say, not as I do” situation. Tune in for history, hauntings, and one exploration that went off the rails.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
She used to get visited by people at night that
died in the mills.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
There is a shadow figure standing right next to where
the pictures are on the wall that we had just been.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
At about ten minutes ago. Right when we crossed the bridge.
I saw something.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
And as I walk into the hallway, I feel like
I see a little girl out of the right corner
of my eye.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Dude, I see this fucking man quick one too, like,
blink my eyes for three seconds and he's fucking gone. Dude.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
The inn is haunted by three ghosts. He says, there's
the general, there's a little girl.

Speaker 4 (00:53):
All of a sudden, just gets this weirdest feeling today,
just got really cold all of a sudden. It's like,
kinda within a minute of saying that, we see two
blonde hair, blue eyed children.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Hear them come up the stairs, but I don't see
the light, didn't hear anything. Ferdie went back down to
get it, and about five minutes later he comes up
the stairs and he's got the light in hand, and
I'm like, what did you do?

Speaker 2 (01:18):
You forget the light downstairs the first time? He's like,
what do you mean?

Speaker 3 (01:21):
He's like, I heard you come up the stairs. I
didn't see a light appeers like, dude, that wasn't that
wasn't me.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
There's a weird feeling about it.

Speaker 5 (01:29):
We turned, we will.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
These kids are fucking gone too.

Speaker 2 (01:35):
Happy Birthday two.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
Happy Birthday two.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Happy Birthday, Jason Jay, Happy Birthday two.

Speaker 5 (01:51):
Oh please don't feel me.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Happy Friday the thirteenth, June thirteenth. By the way, Jason
Voorhees's birthday.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
When the movie takes place June fourteenth.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
Thirteenth, thirteenth, Friday June thirteenth.

Speaker 5 (02:07):
I fucked it up already.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
Friday June thirteen, nineteen eighty and now Friday June thirteenth,
twenty twenty five, forty five years later.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
Forty five years later, and I forget how many people.

Speaker 5 (02:24):
His kill count is like over two hundred.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Pretty good for a kid who didn't know how to
swim in the first movie.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Yeah, who allegedly drowned when he was like six, and
he mysteriously is now like seven foot four and four
hundred pounds.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Kid who looked like he was, kid who looked like
in the first movie that he was burned to a
crisp and then drowned, and now all of a sudden,
he's eight seven and a half feet tall wearing a
hockey mask.

Speaker 5 (02:52):
Yeah, and he just fucking manhandles people.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
You know, even though he drowned in the summer, he's
wearing a it's wearing a hockey mask. For some reason.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
He did fun fact about Jason. He didn't wear that
hockey mask till the third one.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
I was kind of wondering when that mask came around.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
But in the third one, the second one, he wore
a potato sack over his head.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
So do you know what? You know what Jason boor
He's his favorite exercise.

Speaker 5 (03:21):
Is, Oh god, here we go. No, I do not
show dead lifts.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Somebody else suggested he could love skull crushers too.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Uh yeah, that's uh, that's a good one.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
I mean whatever. Whatever his favorite lifting exercise is. He
does not do swimming for cardio.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
No, he's not the strongest swimmers.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
Somebody somebody described him as a lead duck.

Speaker 1 (03:56):
Yeah at the bottom, undestructible.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
Besides that, besides that, yeah, oh so uh oh, what was.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
It, Joe, Joe, why don't you tell him this big,
big fat amber.

Speaker 5 (04:14):
In the in the fire you got going on right now?

Speaker 3 (04:18):
Oh yeah, so yeah, like I told I put out
a post the other day on Instagram and Facebook and
threads and all that stuff about starting to do starting
to work on cover art for a book that I've
been writing, and then I finally had an epiphany as
to how.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
To end the book.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
So I've I've got this whole thing written out right
for the most part, it's almost complete, and I just
I've been I've had such bad writer's block for like,
probably for like three years.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
I've had writer's block. I couldn't figure out how to
end it. I've tried several different ways, play with it
this way, that way, and just never never had the
right ending for it, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
M M.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
Sometimes sometimes you just gotta wait for the story to
kind of show itself to you. And finally, dude, it
hit me like a hit me, like a ton of bricks.

Speaker 3 (05:08):
After we got back from Pericon, I was taking a
shower and I was like, oh my god, that's it.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
Was there anything in Perakon that influenced this epiphany.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
No, I think it was. You remember what you were
talking about writer's block with your screenplay for your movie
that you're gonna be filming this summer.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
Yeah, And I just fucking scrapped like seventy three pages.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
And you also told me that you were having a
really bad writer's block and you started you just said,
fuck it, I'm not gonna write, and you started reading
Stephen King and then you just it just reading kind
of reinvigorated that. Yes, when we're at pera Con, I
was smashing through that Harlan Coben book and probably like
I think I'd read that whole book in like six hours.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Yeah, you destroyed it, right.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
And I think that just kind of unlocked something like
the book.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
I mean, the Harley Gold book that I wrote had nothing,
It is nothing like the book that I'm writing. But
it just just opened up those uh you know, those.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
Creative because like so when I smashed through Carrie, like
Carrie has nothing to do with my screenplay at all. Yeah,
when you're reading good fiction, it just kind of unlocks
your brain to like other does different ideas.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
It opens up your potential, like it opens up different
pathways and stuff and kind of just helps you see
what you're looking for. You know, we're not out here
like plagiarizing books and stealing ideas. It's just opening up
the idea, kind of opening up those neural pathways to
kind of just think differently, you know.

Speaker 1 (06:53):
So Joe anyway, just really about to drop his third
book in the very near future.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Pretty close. Yeah, it's it's coming up. It's gonna be. God,
I hope it's gonna be in the next few months.
But it is.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
It is a sci fi fantasy. It is a sci
fi Okay, don't laugh. You might laugh at me with
this one. It is a sci fi erotic fantasy. Okay, Wow,
I am dabbling in erotic fiction.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
Is it like that movie with Arnold Swartz and air
and the three boom checks?

Speaker 2 (07:27):
Oh my god?

Speaker 1 (07:29):
What the fuck is the name of that movie?

Speaker 3 (07:31):
That's that Total recalls? That's Total Recall. Yeah, dude, let
me tell you something. I love the original Total Recall.
We should do that as a movie horror movie Monday
one time.

Speaker 5 (07:42):
We should, dude.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
But anyways, yeah, sci fi erotic fantasy. So it's playing
on the idea of aliens.

Speaker 5 (07:57):
So, folks, this one will not only stimulate late your mind.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
But who knows, why is it spicy?

Speaker 2 (08:09):
You might read that go, oh, it's jill third book,
and that's that's a spicy meet the ball.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
That's some good ship.

Speaker 2 (08:21):
All right, man, So what are we getting into today?

Speaker 5 (08:24):
Okay, holy motherfucker.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
Yeah, tell us the uh, tell us what we're doing,
and we'll get into it after the after the intro.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
All right, folks, I'm going to take you on a
journey of a wacky urban exploration I did of an
abandoned hospital in Patucket, Rhode.

Speaker 5 (08:44):
Island, and uh yeah, I'm going to get into it
real soon.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
So let's do this ship, all right.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
We'll be back after the intro.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
In the dark forest, life's a secret told and broken
stories by those who have bore witness among a murder,
a long forgotten ghost town shrouded in mystery. We're not
just here to uncover these stories. We're here to walk
the haunted paths, seek out the restless spirits who linger
in these forsaken places, and we want you to come along.

(09:15):
Welcome to tails, trails and taverns where curiosity defy his caution.
We venture into the eerie trails, the abandoned ghost towns,
and the old taverns where echoes of the past still
cling to the air. These are the places others might
warn you not to go to. So lace up your boots,
grab a work and flashlight and join us together. We'll

(09:36):
tell the tails, hike the trails, and raise a glass
of the spirits, both spectral and distilled, who wait for
us at the tavern's door.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
Folks, tonight's episode is on the Memorial Hospital in Patucket,
Rhode Island.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
Okay, write that down. There's going to be a test.

Speaker 1 (09:59):
Now.

Speaker 5 (10:00):
I'm going to tell you something.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
And I've said this a million frigging times, and I'm
going to say it a million and one.

Speaker 5 (10:09):
Do what I say, not what I.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
Do, Okay, Because folks, this urban exploration could have ended
horrifically if it wasn't for my daughter.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
Shit.

Speaker 5 (10:27):
When I sent Joe the text.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
Oh my god, I didn't even want to read it.
I was like, oh my god, yeah it was.

Speaker 5 (10:38):
But I'll get into that first.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
First and foremost, let me just get into the history
of this hospital real quick. Yeah, just so I can
get that kind of So, the Memorial Hospital of Rhode
Island was a hospital.

Speaker 5 (10:53):
In Patucket, Rhode Island.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
It was actually on one eleven Brewster Street in Patucket,
Rhode Island.

Speaker 5 (11:00):
This hospital was around for a long time.

Speaker 1 (11:03):
It operated from eighteen ninety four to twenty eighteen. Jesus yeah, okay. So.

Speaker 5 (11:12):
The hospital was founded through.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
Eighteen ninety four bequest from William F. Sally's, a businessman
and philanthropists who owned Mills and Sayville's Rhode Island. Sally's son,
Frank A. Sally's, decided to build the original thirty bed
hospital with his own funds. Throughout the twentieth century, the

(11:37):
size of the hospital greatly expanded. The hospital was a
two hundred and ninety four bed facility serving Blackstone Valley
of Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts. Memorial Hospital was a
teaching affiliate of the Warren Albert.

Speaker 5 (11:56):
Medical School of Brown University.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
Small facilities are located in the Quality Hill Plainfill and
in Central Falls. In twenty thirteen, Memorial Hospital of Rhode
Island merged with Care of New England CNE Healthcare System
and affiliation with Kent County Hospital, Women in Infants of.

Speaker 5 (12:20):
Rhode Island and Butler Hospital Closure.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
On October eighteenth, twenty seventeen, Care New England announced its
plans to close Memorial Hospital, which had been struggling financially
for the previous ten years. The financial decline accelerated after
mismanagement by Care of New England after they acquired the
hospital in twenty thirteen. This was worsened by the creation

(12:50):
of new ambulatory CNE practices within the traditional attachment of
the NHRI that was funneled that funneled patients away from
Memorial to CNE's other member hospitals. This enabled CNE to
create a situation in which patient volume decreased at Memorial Hospital,

(13:16):
which in turn be used as an excuse to further downsize.
In the summer of twenty sixteen, the maternity ward was closed,
The hospital's intensity care unit was closed in December of
twenty seventeen, and its emergency room was closed in January first,
twenty eighteen. The building was transitioned into an outpatient care

(13:41):
center to cut costs. In April of twenty eighteen, Carter
Care announced plans to purchase the hospitals, but Care New
England expressed doubts as to whether the hospital could be reopened.
That's just the brief history of the hospital, folks, A

(14:02):
little fun fact, and I don't really know if it's
fun but I'm just gonna tell you anyway, because I
told Joe before we even started this hospital, before we
even started this podcast. I mean, so my mother. This
hospital was actually in the in the nineties and early
two thousands. This was a poppin' and really successful hospital,

(14:23):
and they were actually very good at hip and knee transplants.
They like specialized in that, Like you know how some
hospitals specialize in certain things. Yeah, yeah, this hospital specialized
big time in knee and hip transplants. So in the

(14:47):
summer of two thousand and five, that was the summer
before I went to boot camp. My mom went in
there in late June of two thousand and five for
placement to get an artificial knack.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
The sh okay yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
So crazy thing was, though she got her artificial meet
and while she was in the hospital rehabbing, just by
freak freak luck, my mom.

Speaker 5 (15:16):
Started getting extremely ill. She turned like she got.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
All jaundiced and was very, very fucking sick. Hum my dad,
I'll never forget this, because I had plans for fourth
of July of two thousand and five. I was gonna
go drink some beers with my boys and catch the
fireworks down in downtown Fall River, Like I had a
whole day planned, right, yeah, Because I was leaving for

(15:45):
boot camp in late August of that year.

Speaker 5 (15:47):
So I was gonna party it up on the floor.
My dad came to my bedroom at.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
Like six in the morning on Friday, on July fourth,
two thousand and five, and he says, wake up, Mom's
really sick and she may not make it through the day.
I was like, what the fuck are you talking about.

Speaker 5 (16:10):
He's like, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
The hospital just called. We got to go. So, like
my other siblings, they're not living in the house anymore,
so it's just me and my old man, you know
what I mean. Yeah, we going on the hospital and
my mom had been sick for a few days, but
they finally found out. What happened was she ended up

(16:32):
getting a hole in her intestines.

Speaker 5 (16:34):
While she was in the hospitals.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
And the stomach acids and all that fit inside her
stomach started getting into a bloodstream and she went septic.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
Bro Yeah, that's pretty nasty stuff.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
So she had to go into an emergency surgery and
the doctors were.

Speaker 5 (16:55):
Like, look, we got to cut out about.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Roughly eight to ten inches out of her coalon and
then reattach it and hopefully she'll be all right.

Speaker 5 (17:06):
So my dad was like, so.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
Like, what's her state, what's her odds? And the doctor
was pretty much like it's a fifty to fifty, you
know what I mean. So that was fucking freaky.

Speaker 5 (17:18):
My mom underwent this like eight hour long surgery.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
I just remember waiting in the in the fucking waiting
room forever.

Speaker 5 (17:29):
And then finally, you.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
Know, later that day, we got the good news that
she had the surgery and she should be fine, you
know what I mean. But her body was at such
a weak in state that they were afraid that she
might die under the knife, you know what I mean. Yeah,
But I mean you could.

Speaker 5 (17:50):
Say, oh man, that shitty look.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
But the fact that that fucking happened while she was
in the hospital rehabing a fucking artificial knee, it's kind
of a luck thing, honestly if you think about it.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Yeah, because it so it didn't have It didn't have
anything to do with the surgery that she had on
her knee. It just it just happened.

Speaker 5 (18:11):
It had nothing to do with her knee replacement.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
It just happened to be the fact that she was
in a hospital when she ended up getting a hole
in her intestines while she was rehabbing for her knee.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
Wow, kind of wacky when you think about it.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
I mean, how that's crazy. How do you get a
hole in your intestine?

Speaker 1 (18:33):
I mean, I have no idea.

Speaker 5 (18:35):
Dude.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
Wow, that's insane. So that's lucky. That's really lucky that
she was in the hospital and they just were able
to take care of it. But yeah, I.

Speaker 5 (18:50):
Mean that was that was a scary day, dude.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
I remember just waiting in the r Are they going
to come out any minute and tell me that my
mom's dead? You know what I mean?

Speaker 6 (18:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (19:01):
It was freaky, dude. But uh so that's that's my
story and my connection to this hospital. In fact, I'm
gonna taper off that a little bit too. I also
recently found out in twenty fourteen last year that the
hospital my father died in in Stoughton, mass Has been

(19:21):
closed and is abandoned.

Speaker 5 (19:23):
Also.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Wow, So I will definitely be be urban exploring that
one soon because I remember exactly what for my dad
was in, what room he was in when he passed away,
and I just I have a like a feeling like
I have to go and explore that.

Speaker 5 (19:42):
And should you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (19:45):
Yeah, that's definitely it was. It was.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
It was in the hospice war and he was in
room two eleven. I'll never forget that, but that's that's
just on the side. So what happened was I had.

Speaker 5 (20:03):
My daughter for the long weekend. It was Memorial Day weekend.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
The day prior, we had driven out to a I'm
not going to say because this is probably going to
be a future episode. We were out in New Haven,
Connecticut and there was an abandoned middle school that is
allegedly haunted. Also that me and my daughter are explored.
The day prior, on the Saturday of the Memorial Day

(20:29):
we again. So then fast forward to the next day, Sunday.
By bad side of the family, they all live in
Pentucket because a lot of them do because they all
used to work for the Hasbro factory years ago, back
in the sixties and seventies when Hasbro was really popping. Yeah,

(20:53):
but you know, in the eighties and nineties, has Bro
shut down its manufacturing and all.

Speaker 5 (20:58):
That shit went overseas, And you know, now.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
I got a bunch of family members that live in
Patucket and then none of them work for Hasborough.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
Anymore, but they still live in the bucket.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
But they still live in the bucket. So my dad's
side of the family has a massive like family get
together every Sunday before Memorial Day.

Speaker 6 (21:20):
Guy.

Speaker 5 (21:22):
So I was over there.

Speaker 1 (21:23):
I had known about this hospital being vacant since November.
I want to see the October November. It was right
around when I first met Craig. Yeah, he was the
one who told me that it was abandoned. So I
told my daughter, I said, we're going to go to
my dad's family cookout and when we're when we wrap

(21:46):
up there, we're going to go to a little urban
exploration at this hospital.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Nice.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
So, and we were literally ten minutes away from the
fucking thing, you know. Yeah, So we went to the cookout.
We leave the cookout around like four point thirty.

Speaker 5 (22:03):
We shoot over this hospital.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
This fucking place is huge, Joe, It's fucking it is massive.
The only thing that's weird though, is there's two buildings
connected to it. One of the buildings I don't know
what the fuck it is, but it's operational, whatever the
fuck it is. And then the power the the the

(22:29):
power generation for the plant for the hospital. Because most hospitals.

Speaker 5 (22:34):
Have their own power generation station.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
In the event of a blackout, they can they can
still generate, you know what I mean. So all those
people that are on life support. If a fucking blackout happens, they.

Speaker 5 (22:47):
Don't die, you know.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
Yeah, So the power generation is still open too. So
it's like this big building that's a it's like a Samewich,
and the two buildings to the side of it are
still operational.

Speaker 5 (23:03):
And you got this big abandoned building.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
We pull up parking lots, massive buildings, massive, and me
and Reese are like, all right, let's.

Speaker 5 (23:15):
Go to work. So like we park all the way
to the fuck in the back of the parking lot.
We get out, we walk up to the building.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
It's boarded up pretty well, and then we find like
a stairwell that drops down and boom, I see a
board ripped off, right, Yeah, So I look.

Speaker 5 (23:36):
At Reese and I go there we go.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
So we head down we had we walked down that
alleyway we.

Speaker 5 (23:42):
Go to hop in the dude.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
So I'm going to hop in the thing and I
shine my light in there and there's literally I scare
the shit out of two boys that are probably about
the same age.

Speaker 5 (23:52):
As my daughter. They're like, whoa shit, man's getting the
fuck out of us.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
And I'm like, oh, Doug, we were explorers, like you man,
They're like, oh, okay, okay, cool, cool. We thought you
were like the cops or something like, No, we're definitely
not the cops.

Speaker 5 (24:06):
Bro.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Yeah. So we hop in there, me and Reyes's mask up.
We get our bright flashlights going, and for some odd reason,
I never got the name of the names of these
kids or anything, they just decided to follow us.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Joe just hanging out.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
With so because they were just like they were in
there and they're using that like cell phones and slash
lights and we all know like cell phones or shitty flashlights.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
Ye know what I mean. I hope you gave him
some pointers.

Speaker 3 (24:38):
Yeah. We told them like, yo, you want to take
my take my online course on urban exploration, sign up.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
So we bust out with our good flashlights, me and
my daughter mask up. They're following us. We're already in
the on the ground levels. So like one of the
first spots we see is like the kitchen and the cafeteria.

Speaker 5 (25:04):
So it's like, sweet, where ground level the Morgue's got
to be here somewhere, you know, and within I want.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
To say, ten minutes to see in the kitchen boom,
we find the morgue. We find three of the tables
where they do the autopsies on that have the hoses
and it's got like the drains and stuff and everything. Ye.
And then and then in the next room there was

(25:36):
six freezers where they put you know, a dead corpse in.

Speaker 5 (25:43):
So it was like boom, right off the gate, like ten.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
To fifteen minutes into this place where like, fuck, yeah,
we found the autopsy tables, we found.

Speaker 5 (25:50):
The morgue, Like we hit the cream of the crop,
you know, we start exploring it more.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
And what was weird about this place, Joe was like
some areas in the hospital still had lights on. Mmm,
which is a good I've never encountered that in an
urban exploration.

Speaker 5 (26:14):
They've all been power out, no lights like dark, you
know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
But some some spots in this hospital still And Craig
told me about that because he went one day and
it was a day that I couldn't go, and he's like,
don't be freaked golf, but there's there's still power in
some of the some of the wings of that hospital. Okay,
that's really bizarre, but whatever, like you know what I mean. Yeah,

(26:43):
So we're just wandering around.

Speaker 5 (26:47):
We get to some cool like operate operating stations.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
And they got like the big headlamps and like the
like the little thing where you like sterilize all the
operating tools when you're done. That's all that.

Speaker 5 (27:07):
So yeah, there was a lot to see. Man. We
ended up in the main lobby at one point.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
And it's like it's graffiti everywhere, shit smashed. You can
tell people are just going through this, like we're not
the only ones.

Speaker 5 (27:20):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (27:24):
But we're still exploring, checking shit out, and these kids
are fucking following us everywhere.

Speaker 5 (27:34):
And I don't want to be I don't want to
be the guy to be like yo, fuck off.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
But hey, they want to follow our lead whatever, they
can follow our lead. So then we get we we're
at a point now where we've been in there about
an hour, right, Yeah, And I find the maternity ward.

Speaker 5 (27:58):
I see the sign of Maturn in the ward, and they.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
Got like paintings on the walls of like you know,
like animal like elephants and tigers and giraffes and all
that like child shit, you know what I mean. Yeah,
and I'm like, okay, this is pretty cool. And then
I opened a door and went a hallway and there's
like no graffiti bro, there's lights on and like I'm

(28:25):
looking at recent I'm like, this, this place is this
this specific area of the hospital must not get explored
much because there's no graffiti, there's no vandalism, there's no.

Speaker 5 (28:37):
Nothing, you know what I mean. So we keep going
down this hall and then we see this door.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
And it's like it says on.

Speaker 5 (28:50):
The doorway scare well.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
So we're like, okay, well we open the door. We
go inside, and as soon as the door closes behind
us us, a fucking alarm starts going off.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
Joe, We're like, what the fuck, dude.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
We look up.

Speaker 5 (29:09):
I look up in the corner.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
I'm like cameras and dude, the two boys are like,
holy ship, cameras. Fuck.

Speaker 5 (29:17):
So, dude, we run.

Speaker 1 (29:19):
It's a it's a stairway that goes down right, so
it's one flight. It's like a Z patterned stairwell. We're
going out on the thing and it's one of those
like like emergency exit, press press the green button to open,
and I'm pressing the green button and it's just not opening,
and I'm like fuck and the things and I'm like fuck, fuck,

(29:41):
we're locked in here.

Speaker 5 (29:41):
We're gonna get arrested.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
Dude, my daughter saw a window, like a little small window.

Speaker 5 (29:48):
That probably only she could fit through.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
She she grabs the bars of the stairwells and she
just says, fuck this, I'm not getting arrested, and fucking
grabs the thing with this thing and does like a
monkey swing and fucking boots the fucking the Paine glass
off the fucking window. Bam, smashes opens a hole. I

(30:14):
look down the hole. I'm like, Reese, that's like a
ten or fifteen foot jump. She's like, I don't give
a shit, Like dude, I didn't even stop her. She
was just like acting herself.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
Wow, dude.

Speaker 5 (30:25):
She throws her bag.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
Out there, pops out of the thing, fucking jumps out.
She's like my phone, my phone. I'm like, don't worry
about your phone. I got your phone. I put it
in because I was wearing a hoodie. I put it
in my like my center hoodie pouch. Yeah, and these
kids are shitting a pickle, like, oh my god, we're
gonna get arrested. So I'm like pushing the button. Then
I'm like, Reese, open the fucking door. Open the door

(30:47):
from outside, and she's like trying to open it and
She's like, I can't, I can't.

Speaker 5 (30:51):
I'm like, well, try something. Fuck, I don't know, fucking dude.

Speaker 1 (30:55):
So she What she told me later was she grabbed
a big shard of glass from a She booted the
window open and stuck it in the.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
Crack of the door like you.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
Would stick a credit card in the crack of the door,
and jiggled it around.

Speaker 5 (31:11):
And for some.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Odd reason that between that and me pushing the green
button and turning the knob, the door opened.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
Oh wow, and.

Speaker 1 (31:20):
It's just dude, the door opened. I saw the outside.
We bolted to the streets. The kids went.

Speaker 5 (31:26):
One way, we went the other day. I waved to
them and I said, hey, fucking see.

Speaker 1 (31:30):
You later never I'll probably never see those kids ever
again in my life. We're walking and the fucking alarm
is still going off, like you can hear it from
the streets, right, and my kids like, what.

Speaker 5 (31:45):
Do we do it.

Speaker 1 (31:45):
I'm like, well, first of all, don't fucking run. That
makes you look suspicious as fuck.

Speaker 5 (31:49):
Just walk.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
So we're walking, walking, right, and we finally turned the corner,
turned the corner. Okay, now we're at the park where
the part ark lot is and I can see my
truck in the distance, and I can see where we
entered the.

Speaker 5 (32:05):
Building and the cop.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
So the cop is not inside the building, but he's
waiting where we entered because I think he's guessing that
that's the only spot that we can exit.

Speaker 5 (32:17):
From, and he's and he's gonna nap us when we
get out.

Speaker 2 (32:21):
He's just waiting for somebody to come out.

Speaker 1 (32:23):
Yeah, dude, So I just like the cops right damn. Like,
don't even look at him, Just fucking walk like the
fucking terminatorus straight to the fucking truck.

Speaker 5 (32:32):
Just fucking don't make.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
Eye contact, just fucking walk. We get right in the truck.

Speaker 5 (32:38):
Bro, I fucking put.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
The fucking key in, fucking.

Speaker 5 (32:41):
Turn, drive down the thing, and we fucking leave, dude.
So that.

Speaker 1 (32:49):
Was why I tell people, folks, listen the do what
I say, not what I do. Because had it had
not been for my kids to fucking ninja kick this
fucking window open and be small.

Speaker 5 (33:05):
Enough to fit out of it.

Speaker 1 (33:07):
Because those two kids, they were a little.

Speaker 5 (33:10):
Bigger, they couldn't fit through that window.

Speaker 1 (33:13):
Michael barely fit through it. It was just like one
of those.

Speaker 5 (33:18):
Little weird panel windows, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
And she just could barely squeeze herself through it, but
she could, and.

Speaker 2 (33:31):
She got it.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
Open, and she stuck a shard of glass in there
and jiggled it around, and for some crazy reason, it
had opened the door. And that's how we got the
fuck out of the hum And you know people are

(33:53):
gonna be like, oh, Rob, great parenting.

Speaker 5 (33:55):
Well you know what, fucking assume me.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
It's dad man.

Speaker 5 (34:03):
You know, we do cool things. And for what it's worth.
I thought about it later and I was kind of
proud of her, Joe, Is that weird that I feel
that way?

Speaker 1 (34:15):
No, Because I was like, I was like, I took
her out of ice cream later that night, and I'm like,
you know what, kiddo, because she's she's amped up about it.
She's like talking about it like, oh my god, Dad,
Like I've never been so scared, like imediately thought we
were going to get arrested, and like like, I'm like.

Speaker 5 (34:33):
You know what, kiddo. I'm like, you were.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
In a fight a flight situation and you and that
that fucking I'm proud of you. Like you you you
didn't panic, You were in a fire flight situation and
you you found a way to get out. Yeah, like, kudos.

(34:59):
That's how that's that's just how I gauged it. You know,
people don't start sending a review robs the worst pattern
on the face of the planet.

Speaker 5 (35:08):
He fucking it.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
Is what it is.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
They got out of there.

Speaker 1 (35:14):
We got out of there because my kids saved all
our asses.

Speaker 7 (35:20):
Yeah, because I literally at one point I'm like, oh
my god, I'm gonna get arrested with a bunch of
fucking little kids, and they they're going to think I'm
a fucking lunatic, like you know what I mean, right.

Speaker 5 (35:36):
But anyway, we got out of there, and it was
a cool exploration.

Speaker 1 (35:43):
When I went back to to Wall Trails, we were
in there, I want to say, maybe an hour and
fifteen minutes. Yeah, definitely didn't see the whole building. But
you know what, I'm never stepping foot in that place.

Speaker 2 (35:58):
Ever again, I know right after that.

Speaker 5 (36:01):
Fuck no, I'm never so that that was a one
and done.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
It was freaky at one point seeing the the like
the main lobby because it still looked the same, like, well,
my mom had that procedure, so I definitely had moments
of deja there, huh. But but yeah, it was it

(36:31):
was a cool exploration.

Speaker 5 (36:32):
The morgue was really it had like a like a
chillingness to it. It was, yeah, it was. It was
definitely an interesting part of an exploration, to say the least.

Speaker 2 (36:50):
You know.

Speaker 1 (36:52):
But anyways, Uh, now that I've told you about that,
guess what, folks, Allegedly this place is haunted. Oh yeah,
oh yeah, And I am going to get into that
in like two seconds.

Speaker 2 (37:08):
Cool, can we to hear this?

Speaker 1 (37:11):
Okay, So I don't have too much information on this,
but I have I have one little brief paragraph here
and that I have a good little.

Speaker 5 (37:22):
Article from The Valley Breeze.

Speaker 1 (37:24):
Nice, So let me.

Speaker 5 (37:26):
Get into that.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
So is the Memorial Hospital in Pentucket haunted? Yes, some
people believe that the abandoned Memorial Hospital in Pentucket.

Speaker 5 (37:36):
Rhode Island, is haunted.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
A local resident, Dennis Pear, has released a documentary showing
the hot showcasing the hospital's eerie state, which includes descriptions
of its decaying.

Speaker 5 (37:48):
Rooms and unsettling discoveries.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
The Breeze Extra, a local news source, while discussing the documentary,
stated that some people believe the hospital is haunted. So
the documentary that they're talking about by this guy, Dennis Pear, Yeah,
all it is is a it's a forty five minute
YouTube video of him urban exploring the building.

Speaker 5 (38:11):
Oh, it's not really a documentary.

Speaker 2 (38:14):
Do you got a name for that?

Speaker 1 (38:18):
It's it's a Memorial Hospital Providence of Pentucket, Rhode Island,
Urban exploration Dennis Pear.

Speaker 5 (38:27):
It's just forty five minutes of him walking around.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
The hospital and he's like like something like he hears
like a noise.

Speaker 5 (38:33):
He's like, oh, did you hear that? I heard that.
It was a sound like no, you know.

Speaker 1 (38:39):
What I mean. It's one of those things.

Speaker 2 (38:42):
Did you hear that alarm going off? When I went.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
That's It's it's not like a very great, like in
depth documentary, like.

Speaker 5 (38:54):
You do you think I'm talking about? You know what
I mean?

Speaker 2 (38:58):
Yeah, it's just an urbas exploration.

Speaker 5 (39:01):
Where he hears a couple's docking noises.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Yeah, yeah, and you know, but I figured it was
worth mentioning, so I actually, okay, yeah, actually I.

Speaker 5 (39:15):
Got two more articles on this place.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
Okay, Okay, cool, Okay.

Speaker 5 (39:22):
This one.

Speaker 1 (39:23):
I don't think this one's going to get into the
haunting one, but the final one will.

Speaker 5 (39:26):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (39:28):
Memorial Hospital a campus of eight buildings constructed over a
course of eighty years and encompassing styles of Romanesque to
Spanish colonial to brutalitism okay last tenant. The hospital closed

(39:49):
in late twenty seventeen after struggling financially for more than
a decade. After the purchase by Care New England in
twenty thirteen did nothing to address the financ burdens. In
the summer twenty sixteen, the maternal ward was closed. The
hospital's intensive kri so I already read this okay. Architecture

(40:11):
the campus has been constructed has constantly grown since our
first dormed building, by the Sales Building in nineteen eighteen.
The building formed the nexus of the campus for the
next eighty years, with twenty three patient beds constructed for
just fifty thousand dollars. In nineteen thirty one, in the

(40:35):
midst of the Great Depression, Memorial opened a pediatric and
maternity unit using a two hundred thousand dollars donation from
mister and missus James R.

Speaker 5 (40:45):
McCole in memory of their daughter Margaret.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
The unit, named after the family, added forty four beds
for children and twenty five for maternity. Two decades later,
in nineteen fifty one, workers completed a two story wing,
named the Richardson Buildings after an original trustee, E. Russell Richardson,
who left a fund of two hundred and eighty five

(41:11):
thousand dollars when he died in nineteen thirty one.

Speaker 5 (41:15):
The building added fifty six.

Speaker 1 (41:17):
Beds, bringing the hospital to a total of two hundred
and fourteen bedcow. A critical year in Memorial's history was
nineteen sixty five, which saw the opening of the Harold W.

Speaker 5 (41:31):
Wood Building and a.

Speaker 1 (41:33):
Launch of an ambiguous modernization and expansion program that continued
for more than twenty years and enlarged the physical appearance
and size of the main campus.

Speaker 5 (41:45):
To its current size. This place is fucking massive job.

Speaker 1 (41:48):
I mean it's yeah, it's easily like five six stories high.
So it says right here, the seven story Wood building,
it's a really big fuck hospital job. The seven story
Wood building provided Memorial with an additional one hundred and
fifty medical, surgical, and maternity beds. The building also featured

(42:12):
a new X ray department, a new emergency ward facility,
and cafeteria wing named for the longtime treasurer and president.

Speaker 5 (42:23):
Of the hospital. The Wood project costs three point eight
million dollars.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
Of that one point three million, and an additional three
hundred thousand more than expected was donated by the community.

Speaker 5 (42:37):
Phase two of the modernization.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
Program, the Doctor Percy Hodgens Building, was dedicated next to
the Wood building in nineteen seventy six. The building, named
after president of the Board of trustees, costs eight million dollars,
of which four million was pledged by members of the
community and hospital staff. Inside was a new operating theater

(43:05):
with eight operating rooms, a pharmacy, and a space for
transportation and central processing. In addition, there were eighty modern
patient rooms, including those in the new intensive care and
coronary care unit. This is when the hospital took a

(43:26):
strong emphasis on working on prosthetic.

Speaker 5 (43:32):
Plastro surgeries.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
Okay, rating from backfusions to like I said earlier, artificial
joints and I can't even pronounce this word something astrophlee. Yeah,

(43:57):
so pretty much it became a hospitalized hospital that specialized
in artificial artificial joints.

Speaker 5 (44:05):
Yeah, I gotcha by the nineteen seventies.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
In nineteen eighty five, Phase three of the modernization was
the one point seven million dollar Ambilatory Care Center. The
sixteen thousand square foot center served as a central facility
for outpatient services and was the first part of the
fourteen point three million dollar construction and renovation program House.

Speaker 5 (44:33):
There were such services as.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
A mammogram offered mammograms, X rays, blood screenings, and other
laboratory testing. The remainder of the money, twelve point six million,
was used for the new Sales building, completed in September
of nineteen eighty seven. Redevelopment entrepreneur Michael mada In an

(44:57):
investing group wanted to continue two line, thinking that Lockwood
Development was proposing before their financial fallthrough. Their plan would
include housing for senior veterans. History The Patucket General Hospital
Memorial Hospital was chartered more than a century ago by

(45:18):
Patucket Businessman's Associations as the Patucket General Hospital to provide
quality care to the people of the Blackstone Valley region,
regardless of their ability to pay. The hospital was funded
by a two hundred thousand dollars gift from William F. Sells,
a funder of the salves finishing plant in Lincoln, after

(45:38):
his death in eighteen ninety four. Memorial grew from a
thirty bed institution that admitted two patients on its first
day to a sprawling thirteen anchor teaching institution affiliated with
the Warren Albert Medical School of Brown University, with two
hundred and ninety four beds.

Speaker 5 (45:58):
And three satellite sounded like primary.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
Care facilities in Rhode Island in nearby Massachusetts. It is
the site of the Alpha Albert Medical Schools teaching program.

Speaker 5 (46:12):
So maybe that's what that other building was. Maybe they
still teach there.

Speaker 1 (46:17):
Yeah, I remember I told you there was like some
sort of functioning building like sandwich to it. Yeah, maybe
it's a medical school.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Hum.

Speaker 1 (46:28):
Interesting, That's the only thing I could think of, you
know what I mean, schools, teaching programs, and internal and
family medicine, and operated a school of nursing for more
than seventy years. Okay, so that is the history of

(46:50):
the building.

Speaker 5 (46:52):
Okay, Okay, that's some history there.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
So now I'm going to get into the spooky goods self.
The Valley Breeze article, Okay, The Valley Breeze is the
Memorial Hospital Haunted documentary highlights eerie conditions by Jennifer Martinez

(47:20):
of the Valley Breeze from September twenty sixth four and
it has a picture of the infamous autopsy room. I
have a picture of the same thing that I took
in there.

Speaker 6 (47:34):
Yeah, OKAYU with litter and old film receivers sprewed across
the desk, hallways congested with chunks of plaster and fallen
ceiling tiles, and dawless rooms with incomplete furniture pieces.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
It's clear that the interior of the vacant Memorial Hospital
building at one one one eleven Brewster Street and Patucket
Island is in rough shape.

Speaker 5 (48:01):
It's very weird.

Speaker 1 (48:03):
I'm going to say this much, Joe. It's very weird
that it just throws the address out like that. Most
vacant places they don't do, not disclose the address like that. Yeah,
but for some reason.

Speaker 5 (48:16):
In this place they did.

Speaker 1 (48:21):
It, says lifelong Rhode Island resident Dennis Pear. Released a
roughly forty five minute YouTube documentary on his exploring with
Big D Channel, highlighting the hair raising conditions.

Speaker 5 (48:36):
During a October twenty twenty.

Speaker 1 (48:39):
Two visit with his fellow YouTube explorer Mike Cox Snall
as they did a full urban exploration of the old
decrepit hospital.

Speaker 5 (48:52):
About twenty five minutes into the.

Speaker 1 (48:54):
Documentary, Pear and cock Shnall found the autopsy room, where
Pear says he notices the smell of decaying flesh after
opening one of the refrigerators. Peretti dishes with blood and
tissue samples from nineteen ninety one were also found in
the room. They were said, as well as running water

(49:16):
to clean the autopsy fading table. My blood's probably in
here from thirty years ago, Pear stated in the video.
Faint blood stains can also be seen on the room's floor,
which remains intact. Some people say that the hospital has haunted,
Pear told the Breeze even when we were in the hospital,

(49:40):
you could hear things that could not be explained. According
to Pear, he heard footsteps on the ground and doors opening.

Speaker 5 (49:47):
All around him.

Speaker 1 (49:48):
I don't know if it was someone else exploring the
building while I was there or not, but I never.

Speaker 5 (49:54):
Saw anyone else there, and it was just me and
my friend as far as we knew, he said. He
said he was.

Speaker 1 (50:03):
Most bothered by the hissing from the boiler, saying he
didn't know where it was coming from at first. With
the building well over one hundred years old, Pair said
he can't imagine how many people have died there. It's
it's very sad to see the hospital and its current condition.

(50:23):
He said. Memorial Hospital was shut down in twenty eighteen
due to the rising costs and low patient volume, despite
union efforts to preserve jobs and medical care services for
Protucket residents. By the time the deal fell through in
late twenty twenty two due to the questionable business practices

(50:45):
of businessman Michael Mauta, the building was visibly deteriorated, with
local residents reporting bullet holes, abandoned vehicles, and an interior
and generally deployable conditions. In one clip of the documentary,
per captures the stairwells rotting with decay, just peeling paint

(51:08):
and sand bags flewed all around the floor outside of
what once was the hospital's main entryway check in.

Speaker 5 (51:19):
I couldn't believe how quickly this hospital started falling apart,
Pair said.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
He shared that his daughter was one of the last
babies born in the hospital in twenty sixteen, and that
he himself went there.

Speaker 5 (51:33):
For a primary care.

Speaker 1 (51:34):
Visit often when he lived in Patuckia. Hair has also
been a resident of Central Falls North Providence in Cranston,
where he currently lives. During his walk through the vacant hospital,
some of the corridors were.

Speaker 5 (51:49):
Dimly lit like I said, very weird. I've never seen
like fluorescent lighting working in an abandoned hospital, giving that
a spooky quality.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
Pair also got to the maternity ward where his daughter
was born, which took him a few visits to find
and was an emotional experience for him. He said a
tree painted on the wall of the ward with all
the babies names on it, including his daughter's name. After

(52:24):
visiting the hospital again last month.

Speaker 5 (52:26):
Pear said he found many smash.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
Windows, likely due to homeless people camping in the building
during the winter.

Speaker 5 (52:35):
He said he plans to release another documentary.

Speaker 1 (52:38):
Victory, another documentary video of the state of the hospital
on YouTube soon. Pear has also documented other spooky places
in Rhode Island, including.

Speaker 5 (52:49):
The now demolished lighthouse in.

Speaker 1 (52:53):
Abandoned houses and the Good Burger two film locations on
Mineral Spring Avenue.

Speaker 5 (53:00):
In Northern Providence.

Speaker 1 (53:03):
It's just very sad that this was allowed, he said.
Regarding the Memorial Hospital state, you can tell that the
place is getting vandalized badly. City officials have reported concerns
with the roof and the terrain the terrannial reins finding
their ways into the opening. They previously said that they

(53:27):
will do everything they can to protect the integrity of
the facility as well as protect the residents and the
surrounding neighborhoods and their interests. So that's the.

Speaker 4 (53:39):
That's the article from Dennis Pear.

Speaker 2 (53:45):
Nice okay, I mean.

Speaker 1 (53:52):
Place the autopsy room, did I mean it's an autopsy
room with autopsy tables, so it's spooky. A lot of
dead bodies have been on those stainless steel tables.

Speaker 2 (54:07):
Right. You said you went to the morgue. Morg is
always creepy.

Speaker 1 (54:10):
You wait to the morgue too. I did not smell
rotting flesh, but yeah, I mean I don't have that
great sense of smell anyways.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
Oh there you go.

Speaker 1 (54:25):
But yeah, man, So that is uh my story of
the Memorial Hospital in Kentucky, Rhode Island.

Speaker 2 (54:33):
Cool.

Speaker 1 (54:34):
I'm glad I got to explore it for the one
and only time I'm ever gonna go in that fucking place.

Speaker 2 (54:41):
Yeah. Uh, I'm glad you got out of there. And
you know, like Rob said before, please do not go there.
Please do not go inside. You will probably get arrested
if you go inside of there. Don't do what he did.
He narrowly escaped obviously, Yes, could have been locked in
a room, not able to get out, waiting for people

(55:01):
to come in and rescue them, just to slap your
handcuffs and throw you in the cell. So do not
do that. But thank you guys so much for listening,
Thanks for tagging along. If you haven't yet, leave us
a review, leave us a five star rating. Wherever you
listen to podcasts, I would definitely we would definitely appreciate

(55:24):
more and more gets us out there quite a bit,
definitely helps the allergism spread our name out to more places,
and that's definitely what we want to do. I know
a lot less people listen to this than actually go
on Instagram, So you know, I would say go to Instagram,
but honestly, I really just want to get the Instagram

(55:46):
people to go'll come to listen to the podcast, but yeah.

Speaker 5 (55:49):
Yeah, we want we want the other way around.

Speaker 2 (55:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (55:53):
So yeah, if you're if you've got a friend or
family member or somebody that you know is in the
Paranormal Stories, you know, let them know about the podcast,
talk about it with them.

Speaker 1 (56:05):
They can listen to all our craziest episodes and turn
it on.

Speaker 5 (56:09):
And we got a lot of good ship. We got
over one hundred episodes, folks.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
Oh yeah, we got a little something for everybody.

Speaker 2 (56:18):
That's right. We've got a lot of a lot of
different stuff, man, so check it out. And uh, you know,
like we were talking about before, we got books, we
got different stuff out. So I've got I've got two
books out if you want to check those on. The
leak is in the bio from Instagram.

Speaker 5 (56:34):
And my movie Slash screenplay is blaming hot right now, folks.

Speaker 2 (56:42):
Robin's got a screenplay up he's working on. So if
you like the show, definitely support us.

Speaker 1 (56:47):
We got the books, we got folks coming out, we
got a movie coming in, so stay tuned.

Speaker 3 (56:56):
All right, thanks a lot for listening, guys, have a
good night, and uh, happy Friday the thirteenth.

Speaker 5 (57:02):
Yeah, don't look at a sleep A piece of cake
off to Jason.

Speaker 3 (57:05):
That's right, with a knife in it, big knife, big
blady knife.

Speaker 2 (57:17):
Alright, ladies and gentlemen, get out there, find your spirits.

Speaker 1 (57:20):
Hollow h
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