Episode Transcript
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(00:16):
Hi, everyone, Welcome to anotherepisode of It's About Damn Crime, where
two best friends get together and talkabout what Justine, what's the topic this
week? Serial Killer? There yougo? And True Crime? Right.
Yes, if you're a newcomber,if you're a newcomer, well, if
(00:39):
you're a newcomber. If you're anewcomber, welcome. If you don't know
what we're about, we focus oncases featuring people of color. We have
a weird sense of humor. Welike to make inappropriate jokes. We're not
very serious. So if that's notyour cup of tea, thanks for coming.
(01:03):
Bye, see you later. Yeah, but if that is your cup
of tea, hella hella, hello, um yes, um. So a
couple of things before we get started. We are not releasing an episode next
week due to the holiday Thanksgiving.Yeah, I will not be eating turkey.
(01:30):
Will you at least be eating ham? No green eggs and ham?
Damn I it so you're not eatingany Thanksgiving dinner. I'm gonna have like
all the sides, just no trickyor ham or him, because it's just
like gonna be me and my mom, Likeian. I don't know for myself,
(01:53):
that's fine. Yeah, I mightget like a like a rotisserie chicken.
Oh yeah, that's good. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think
that's the direction that we're heading.Yeah. Yeah. Also, I had
food poisoning aka the flu. Itwasn't the fucking flu. I'm gonna kill
(02:15):
you the next time I see you. Oh my god, it was so
good. I hate you. Bertiewas like, I have food poisoning,
and I was like, oh what, you have the flu? Like and
it was really getting out her nerves. But I could not stop saying it
because it was getting out her nerves. You know, you guys know high
roll and me. I kept gettingangry. I kept getting angry, and
(02:39):
I was just adding fuel to herfire. Oh my good stuff. It
was the worst. So this wasthe first time of me getting food poisoning,
never had before, and I haveto say it was one of the
worst experiences of my life. I'mstill going through the tell end of it.
You're still adjusting back to her life. Yeah, I'm getting I'm slowly
(03:00):
getting my appetite back. The questionis will you ever eat Subway again?
No? Yeah? No? Yeah? Yeah? So hey didn't you Okay,
So when you were down here withRachel moving h you wanted food,
(03:23):
and you suggested we get subway.I did, and I did that because
you guys were picking up the food, and the subway was in the same
parking lot as my apartment complex,so nothing else be difficult. So you
wouldn't eat in subway? Shut up? Yeah, but I wouldn't have loved
it. Look Burger King once upona time, gaby food poisoning. I
(03:46):
ate a chicken sandwich and I gotreal sick and I couldn't eat Burger King
for like years and years and years. I can eat it again, but
it's like not my favorite thing.If I'm like Jack in the Box or
Burger King, like I'm gonna goJack in the Box every time. But
if I'm with you and you're like, I really want burger can, but
okay I can, I'll eat it, you know, Yeah, but I
don't love any of it. Ispecifically had the subway tuna, which that's
(04:13):
where I fucked up. Oh yeah, yeah, yes, yeah, that's
where I fucked up, because Imean I've had their tuna before, and
for some reason, I was justcraving tuna. Yeah, And I was
telling Scott, thank god I onlyhad a six inch because imagine if I
ate a whole foot long you'd havebeen projectile of vomiting. I would have
been the foot long worth of sandwich. I was looking up the symptoms of
(04:34):
food poisoning and one of them wasdeath. Are you dead right now?
Am I talking to your ghosts?Yes? Yes? Oh this is a
totally different podcast now, yeah,this is a scary podcast. Yeah.
So I probably won't be eating there. I probably won't be even eating like
(04:58):
tuna tuna for a while for quitesome time, really long time. Yeah.
Yeah, so yeah, it sucks, man, It's the worst thing
ever. I had to go.So I called off Thursday and then I
had to go back or I didn'thave to, but I went back to
work Friday, and it was theworst Friday ever. Oh, my Fridays
are bad Fridays. Yeah, youjust can't wait to get out of there,
(05:21):
you know. It seems like theFridays just drag. They really do,
especially when you're sick. Hell yeah, and you're not feeling too hot.
But anyways, that was my life. Any updates? Um, I'm
I'm moving back to Vegas everyone,are you officially though? I officially?
(05:44):
Yeah, I'm waiting to hear backfrom a job and if I don't,
I'll be back before Christmas. Isit my Christmas present? It is your
Christmas present. Don't ask for anythingelse because I'm going to be very broke.
So very soon we'll be able todo an episode in person together.
(06:05):
Yeah, at some point, yes, very excited. All right, Well,
well are we ready to get startedon the case. Yeah, let's
do it? Okay? All right? First and foremost, we want to
(06:38):
give a big shout out to Kimfor recommending this case, this case,
these cases. I'm not really surehow to word this year. Yeah,
I'm to us back in April.I'm very sorry it takes along, Kim,
but you know, sometimes we're alittle late. Things happened, you
know, but we got to it. We did, we did, we're
(07:00):
finally doing it. A second,we want to give it a huge shout
out to Troy Taylor Books dot blogspotdot com, who, without their hard
work, we would not be bringingthis story to you today because, like
so many other of our cases,there's not any information, like none anywhere.
(07:21):
There's like little blips here and there, but nothing this in depth.
Right, Um, So Brittany isgonna link this blog posting in the show
notes and we're going to encourage youguys to go read it after you're done
here, because it's like very beautifullywritten, like a book, Like it's
very like you get a sense ofthe times, you know, it's just
(07:46):
like it's a good startling. We'renot gonna do that like that here because
that's just not who we are.And yeah, we're gonna say dumb things,
you know. Yeah, and realquick, so we know the word
mulatto is offensive, but this caseis for these cases, they're really really
(08:07):
old, you know, early nineteenhundreds old. Um, and this is
what these cases were called back then. And for those of you who don't
know what the word mulatto means,it's quote a person a mixed white and
black ancestry, especially a person withone white and one black parent. Yeah.
(08:30):
Yeah, so this is just likewhat the papers at the Times labeled
this whole thing, right yeah.Um. And last, but not least,
the case question of this episode isprobably gonna be a little shorter than
normal. I don't know, everything'sbeen pretty short normally, or maybe short
is the new normal, who knows. Yeah. Um, but like you
(08:52):
said, there's hardly any information soum, and it happened so far,
like in the early nineteen hundred,so we're gonna get information from it's old
and of course, per usual,doesn't matter what time or place people of
color were being murdered, so noone cared and didn't really talk about it.
(09:13):
Um, But we have like seventhousand audio Stranger Dangerous to catch up
on, so you guys will stillhave a regular length episode after this.
Yeah, all right, are youready? Yeah? All right, Rain,
Louisiana, nineteen eleven. Damn,I wish I had Robert Stack's voice.
(09:37):
We gotta fight like some so likeor even like that daylight music like
the dune Dune to do after allthe dates? Yeah, okay. Edna
Opelousas I hope I didn't put herthat last name. Probably did so.
Edna and her three daughters were wereviciously murdered with an a a while sleeping
(10:00):
in their beds. A month later, in February, ten miles away in
a town named Prowley, Walter J. Buyers, his wife and child were
also murdered with an axe. Thentwo weeks after that, four more people
belonging to the Andrea's family who livedin Lafayette were also hacked to bits.
While sleeping in their beds. Thatis already in thirty seconds, not even
(10:26):
five seconds, fifteen seconds. Tenvictims in a two month period. And
we're just getting started, guys,clearly, we just started. Yeah.
Between January nineteen eleven and April nineteentwelve, forty nine people who were predominantly
black and mixed raced were murdered inLouisiana and Texas. Forty nine people.
(10:52):
That's what. That's so many people, that's so many people. Like we
said earlier, all of these deathreceive little to new no nosepaper, little
to no newspaper coverage, so noone was talking about them. Then no
one sures I was talking about them. Now, you know what I'm saying.
(11:13):
But we're going to because Kim askedus to shout out another shout out
to Kim. Eight all right,San Antonio, Texas. March twenty second,
nineteen eleven. Lewis Cassaway, whoworked at the Grant School for Black
(11:33):
children, never showed up for work, so a friend of his stopped by
his home on Olive Street to checkon him and discovered that Lewis, his
white wife, and their children wereall dead. And Lewis was found in
the front room of their home,laying on a day bed with his six
year old daughter, Louise. Theirheads had been crushed by the blunt side
(11:56):
of an axe, and Lewis's facehad been covered with a piece of cloth.
Their six month old son was alsofound with this school, crushed in
his mother's arms in a different bed, and their three year old daughter,
Josie, who was laying across hermother's legs. Again, her head had
(12:16):
also been crushed. Police figured thatshe had probably woke up during the attack
and tried to get away, butunfortunately she didn't get very far because she
was three years old. That's howfast can she have moved? You know?
Fast? Could she have moved?How fast could she have moved?
What am I saying? You go? Oh, my gosh. And the
(12:37):
wife seemed to get the brunt ofthe attack like she had been hit with
the axe way more times than anyoneelse had. And they said that the
blood was like her blood was likesprayed all over the walls. Yeah,
And I don't think they thought thisat the time, but this is the
thought now, is that whoever wascommitting these more was enraged that a white
(13:01):
woman had married a black man andthen they had babies together, you know.
Yeah, and nothing had been taken, so it wasn't a robbery.
In fact, Lewis had cash inhis pocket and it was all still there.
The house hadn't been tossed. Thefamily had just been brutally murdered.
(13:22):
And even though they were a biracial couple, everyone seemed to like them.
They had no known enemies, sopolice were stumped. They didn't know
who could have done this or whyor why. Yeah, but Texas police
hadn't heard about the murders in Louisianaand vice versa, so no one was
putting together they had a potential serialkiller on their hands, which like still
(13:48):
happens now. Yeah, no one'sever talking to each other. I can
imagine this happening more more often thoughback then, because it's like, really,
it's not like they can shoot outa bulletin to surrounding county. Is
like, yeah, it's not anemail. It's not as easy to get
into contact with another department as itis now. Yeah, if it wasn't,
(14:09):
yeah, m all right. Lafayette, Louisiana, November twenty, nineteen
eleven, six members of the NorbertRandall family were also murdered in their beds
with an axe, but this timesomeone came forward and told police that they
had seen a young black woman namedClementine Burnabette I guess near the scene of
(14:31):
the crime. Clementine was nineteen yearsold and knew the Randalls from their church
that they went to. Um,she was questioned, were I'm going to
assume for several hours and you knowthey did that thing to her where they're
like, you say this and thenwe'll let you go. Ye, admit
to this, you know, Um, but no one was. I mean
(14:54):
I think they were aware of itback then, but nobody cared, you
know. Yeah, like whatever.A confession is a confession any who.
After being questioned, Clementine confessed tomurdering the Randalls because the father, Norbert,
had refused to follow church orders.And then Clementine confessed to killing the
(15:18):
Andreas family. You know that hadbeen that had been murdered earlier in February,
with the help of her father.So she took her dad down with
her day. How mad do youthink he was? Did you are to
be so mad? So mad?She wouldn't be my daughter after that?
(15:41):
So the two were arrested and putin jail, but the killings did not
stop, so clearly it wasn't themno, all right. January nineteenth,
nineteen twelve, probably Louisiana, amixed woman named Marine Warner and her three
(16:02):
children were killed while sleeping. Dang, it's like every paragraph starts off this
way. Nam Two days later,a man named Felix browsered. His wife
and their three kids were murdered,the same as everyone else that we've already
told you about. But this timethe killer left behind a note, and
it said, when he maketh theinquisition for blood, he forgetteth not the
(16:23):
cry of the humble human five,which is a verse from Psalms in the
Bible. What exactly what I means, I couldn't tell you. I have
no idea. But because it wasa Bible passage, it told police that
maybe these murders were somehow religiously charged. Yeah, so they went back to
(16:48):
Clementine. But Clementine was clearly crazy. She's couco bananas because she told police
that the murders were happening because ofa voodoo charm she had from a local
witch doctor that gave her and herdad the power to do whatever the hell
they wanted, and they wouldn't bedetected, you know, like they were
(17:08):
invisible, but they were both injail, so they were totally detectable and
one hundred percent not invisible. Theywere just you know, crazy. So
Clementine and her dad didn't end upgoing to trial. I think they stayed
in jail for like two months,which is not so bad for the times,
you know, because I could havejust kept him in there forever.
(17:30):
Yeah. February nineteenth, nineteen twelve, Beaumont, Texas, Hattie Dove,
who was another mixed race woman,along with her three kids, were murdered
yet again in their beds while theywere slamming with an ax. Then in
March twenty seventh, Alan Monroe,her four kids, and a slumber party
(17:52):
guest, a male slumber party guest, were murdered in Guilden, Texas,
same way, sleeping in the bedswith an ax. Yep, I think
it was her brother. Actually Iread it was her brother. Oh,
and I read it was an overnightguest. Oh, so who knows or
(18:12):
I don't know if it was atypo. It said her border, so
I corrected that in my head ashuh, maybe they meant her boyfriend maybe
so boyfriend or oh could have anitherAnd that is when detectives, who didn't
think that Clementine and her bootyo magicare responsible for all these murders, started
(18:36):
to notice a pattern. Now,the killer had been murdering people at different
stops along the Southern Pacific railroad line. Being on the railroad made it easy
for whoever was committing these murders tokill and then you know, get the
hell out of Dodge. So detectivesdid some calculations and they predicted that the
(18:56):
next murder would happen in San Antonio, Texas. But like we said,
this was in then, you know, the early nineteen hundreds, so nobody
was moving that fast or like youknow, picking up their cell phones and
are learning other post departments. Buthot damn San Antonio, Texas. April
twelve, nineteen twelve, eight moreblack and mixed race people were murdered in
(19:19):
their beds while sleeping with an axe. And then the killer stopped for four
whole months. Why hm, Iforgot that. I still more programs.
(19:41):
But of course the black communities werein a panic. Yeah, dude,
I would be too. Hell Yeah, this is like when the Atlanta,
child murderers were happening, right,and yeah, no one's watching out for
us, so, oh my god, so annoying. Okay, so there
are from themselves and started guarding theirhomes. And there was one instance where
(20:03):
a young man was guarding his homeand then a friend of him stopped by
to say hi. But he likescared him. I don't think he was
expecting him, so he shot hisunexpected Huh. I said it was unexpected.
Well, yeah, that's what I'msaying. He just stopped by,
like just wasn't ready for him.You know. I wonder if he jumped
out of the bushes and like tryto scare him. Wasn't there a story
(20:25):
like that not that long ago?Yeah, like a son in law.
Yeah there was a son or somethingand I don't know where while we're laughing
because it's it's a horrible story,but yeah, a son. I think
he like it was a son inlaw and he flew to con visitor his
father in lawn. Yeah, buthe kept banging on the on the door
(20:47):
and he scared the shop out ofhis father in law, and his father
in law came out with a shotgunand shot him, shot him dead.
Killed him. Terrible. That's whyyou can't be acting a damn fool.
Yeah, I always give somebody aheads up. Yeah. First of all,
that's rude to just come over unannounced. Yeah, don't do it anyways.
All right, So anyways, thisguy his friend to stop by.
(21:07):
It wasn't expecting him, so shotand he killed him. And then a
neighbor heard the whole commotions and cameoutside to see what was happening. And
then he got scared because he saw, you know, a dead body on
the ground, and then so hetook off running, and then someone else
got involved and started yelling that thatguy running away that was afraid was the
axe murderer. And then someone elsecame out and shot and killed that guy.
(21:32):
How crazy. It's the chaos man. Such a crazy fucking story that
just goes to show how much everybodywas on edge. Yeah, they were
afraid. I get it. Andeven worse, if you were a man
and you own an axe, whichmost likely you did because you needed that
(21:56):
ship to chop up wood to heatup your home and still have to eat,
and you occasionally traveled, well,shit, your ass was getting arrested
and questioned. Yeah, there wasNoah, there was no hope for you.
So finally, on August sixth,nineteen twelve, Lula Dashall woke up
(22:17):
after an axe cut through her arm. I have to envision these things and
it really hurts my insights. Thekiller had been aiming for her head but
totally missed, and then she ofcourse started to scream because her arm had
been hacked into, and there wasa strange person in her room. So
(22:41):
the attacker took off, and unfortunatelyLula was so terrified and probably in so
much pain that she wasn't able toidentify the killer and or give a description.
But after that the killing stopped,and that was it. Detectives never
figured out it was that killed fortynine fucking people, many of them being
(23:03):
innocent children, but the one thingthey could gather was that whoever was responsible
for all the debts had probably beentrying to quote unquote purify tainted white blood,
because pretty much everyone murdered was eitherin a black or a black and
(23:25):
white relationship, or was, youknow, a mixed race, which forty
nine people. I wonder if itwas one person or if it was like
several people, I don't know.I mean, every theory that we could
(23:47):
ever have on This is going tobe pure speculation, right because it's happened
so long ago, so long ago, Like, I just don't know.
Yeah, So a couple of things. I was thinking, Okay, could
this be KKK related, right,But the KKK wasn't going on around that
(24:07):
time, and they didn't come toor the second group of KKK didn't come
to until nineteen fifteen, so Iguess you can just count them out.
Yeah. Um. And then anotherthing that I read was James Dashel Dashell,
(24:30):
who was what's her name Lula mwho was Lula's husband. He said
that a week prior to Lula gettingattacked, a white man was wandering around
their area and he came up tothe fence and asked James a question and
(24:53):
then asked him if the dog wastheirs, because there was a dog with
James, and then in the mand then uh like maybe at night or
the next day their dog was poisonedM and then you know, a week
later Lula was attacked. Yeah,so I don't know if that white man
(25:18):
was possibly the you know, killeror the attacker. I just I wonder
what happened like in those four monthsor when he stopped, like I won't
know if he got sick, Maybehe got arrested. Yeah, I was
thinking the same thing, like maybehe got arrested on a on a petty
crime MM where he only served likea couple of months and then Yeah,
(25:45):
And I think maybe back then,like they wouldn't have thought to like look
into that, you know, likem because he could have literally been arrested
anywhere too. Though, So it'slike how would they even track that down
back that It's not like you knownow, like all of our criminals or
in one system right, or theirfingerprinted in DNA, there were their DNA
and stuff, But it wasn't likethat back then, Like, yeah,
(26:07):
I don't know, crazy, AndI wonder why he's why he stopped afterwards,
he probably got arrested or died.Do you think maybe he was like,
oh shit, she saw my face, like yeah, or maybe he
got spoots because he thought that shesaw him, yeah, and stopped.
I don't know, so weird.So it could have been like really either
(26:30):
of those things, Yeah that stoppedhim from or he like he probably probably
died. Yeah, I mean,if you kill forty nine people, like
you're not gonna stop because someone mayhave seen your face. That's what I
was thinking too, Like maybe hedid die. Maybe he was like running
away and he was running away andhe fell and he broke his neck.
(26:53):
Maybe he fell on his axe.Oh my gosh, sweet sweet justice.
How ironic would that be. Maybeit was like that movie, like remember
that The Lovely Bones at the endwhen the guy, oh yeah, the
little girl, he like slipped onthe ice and he fell down the side
of the cliff and he just likebroke all his bones on the way down.
(27:15):
Maybe it was like that, Ohshit, man, this is so
crazy and it's weird because it sucksbecause, you know, because these people
were mostly black and mixed race.I mean, I feel like the police
probably didn't even put they're all intosolving this. Nobody gave a shit.
(27:36):
Yeah that's forty and nine people.And like that's what cases that have happened,
like more current time, like seventieseighties whatever that we covered, like
um, who was a serial killerthat was killing all the black prostitutes?
God, which one I can't rememberanymore. Oh yeah's so many of them.
(27:57):
But it's like no one was reportingon it. Nobody was talking about
it. So it's like the sexworkers weren't able to like communicate with each
other, and like there was nowarning for anybody. Yeah, so like
this too, Like I wonder howmany bodies had to be found before it
was like, okay, there's somethinghappening in our black communities here, you
know, like before they pieced ittogether well clearly into a year. So
(28:26):
crazy though, Yeah, this caseis fucking insane. Yeah, and like
this person too, Like they weresmart, right because they were moving around,
like they weren't staying in one place, and they were picking a murder
weapon that was in literally everybody's home. They didn't have to bring it,
like it was already there. Yeah. And I'm pretty sure that if if
the killer was afraid that Lula sawhim, he probably would only lay low
(28:52):
for maybe a few months, justto see if anything came to Yeah,
and then if nothing happened, hewould have resumed killing again. Yeah.
And like knowing what we know now, Like, sorry, if you can
hear my dog's barking at the door, yeah you can. Actually they're so
rude, so fucking loud. Knowingwhat we know now about like like the
(29:12):
psychology or like the Yeah, thepsychology of like a serial killer, like
their mental things that are wrong withthem, like killing that many people,
Like they wouldn't have just stopped.Yeah, Like, I don't think anyone's
ever reached a point like they gountil they get caught. So either he
got caught for something or he died. Maybe he got sick. Wasn't there
(29:34):
like crazy illness in this back thenthat could take him out? Yeah,
in the early nineteen hundreds, Yeah, like like smallpox or something. I
was gonna say the plague, butthat's waiting too for the plague. Hey,
the plague is coming back. Theplague. There's two fucking people in
China that had the plague. WhatYeah, Oh my gosh, dude,
(29:56):
insane. That's crazy. Yeah,man. And also I wonder, yeah,
I am leaning more towards him dyingafter this because also would you think
that after he thought that Lula sawhim, he would have just gotten out
(30:18):
as many murders as he could justlike went crazy. I don't know.
I don't know if I feel likeI probably would have laid low for a
while. I mean, I know, but I mean, or maybe he
moved and maybe he moved to adifferent part of the country. And started
serial killing somewhere else. Maybe hedid move and then because again he's murdering
(30:38):
in the black communities, and yeah, he's murdering white people, but white
people that have married black people,so they're already there. They're like,
everyone's like, well whatever, Yeah, like maybe it happened somewhere else and
no one was reported on it.Yeah, oh shit crazy. I also
read that in I think around thesite same time, there were twenty black
(31:03):
women that were murdered in Georgia.Was it Georgia by Jack the Ripper?
I think he was, Oh,I don't know. There was some murders
happening in Atlanta. Oh there wasa let's see, oh in Atlanta.
Yeah it was not Jack the Ripper, the Atlanta Ripper. Uh? Is
(31:23):
he also known as Jack the Ripper. I don't know Jack the Rippers like
London, No, I know,But there's another Jack the Ripper here in
our in our country. Yeah.Really, yeah, they can't be giving
me serial killers the same names,you know, I know, but they
did. That's very confusing. Iknow, Atlanta. I'm pretty sure.
(31:49):
I'm pretty sure I read Jacked theRipper because I was thinking the same thing,
like maybe in Atlanta Ripper. Thisis some lifetime investigating for you guys.
Let's see if he had different names. Mm hmm oh, I think
he was dubbed Atlanta's Jack the Ripper. Uh, that's what it was.
(32:16):
Oh my gosh, get her newname? Why is every named Jack?
And I why did Jack? Whatif it was like Bob the Ripper.
Yeah, that didn't even sound scarythough. That's Bob the Builder and can
never disgrace that name port a littleBob. Anyways, all right, I
(32:40):
think we're done talking about this one. Um. It just secks it like
you'll never know you know, Well, that is just like the Jack the
Ripper cases that happened in Like yeah, like you'll never know who the killer
was, so like a setting.Yeah, like tell me I need it's
(33:04):
an answer. It's like watching thosedoctor Pimple Popper videos and she's picking all
out all the gunk, but youdon't see all of the gunk and the
video ends. Yeah, it's likeshe doesn't finish the job, and then
you're not you're not satisfied, andthen you have to go to the YouTube,
but that video is not up onthe YouTube, and then you just
feel like your life isn't complete.Yeah, so that's that. Yea.
(33:27):
All right, Now we're moving onto stranger danger. Stranger danger, stranger
danger. This is not a test. I repeat, this is not a
test. You better run wait beforewe start stranger danger stories. We have
(33:51):
a stranger danger update. Let's dothat. Okay, So please hold them
while I get my ducks in arow. Okay, um okay. So
um, I can't tell you whenwe read this story a couple of weeks
ago, a month or so ago, two months ago, maybe it's like
(34:13):
a month ago, probably a monthor so ago. Um. The story
is from mister Massacre who is onSmeal right, and he had that crazy
lady that was like harassing him.M Um. I felt like, oh,
she was saying that her soul wascoming to him, right, oh,
I'm sorry, his soul was comingto her in the middle of the
night. And then his soul waslike they were dirty things. Yeah um.
(34:38):
And then she was like calling himand she's I don't know, clearly
cuckoo bananas. Um. So inthe Facebook group, he had shared some
of the like messages that she hadsent him, yeah, um, which
were all like sexual in nature.Um. And he's like not communicating with
(35:00):
her, right like, he whilehe tried to block her, and then
for some reason I didn't block.But then I told him not to block
her because that way he has likea record of like consistent messages coming through.
Right. Yeah, so I gottaupdate email three days ago. I'm
gonna read it here right now.I love it. I love it when
(35:21):
they give us updates. I know, I feel like see because sometimes you're
training your danger stories, they endand then we don't know where they go.
Yeah, what happened after the fact? Okay, So um, mister
masker says, Okay, so thatcrazy stalker lady hasn't stopped. I'm still
(35:43):
getting countless messages that have become moreand more graphic and really alarming. Most
recently, she sent me a messageto stating that she can't wait to see
me in December. Oh my god, I'm rather alarmed. I warned her
that I was going to the police. That didn't work. I reported her
to the app and that she's contactingme on and I'm going to the police
next. She's also using pictures ofmy face on her profile and posting it
(36:06):
as if it were as if wewere an actual couple. Stopping. I
don't know what else to do afterher file my police report. UM,
I wanted to give you guys anupdate and share a few screenshots so you
can see the horror I'm dealing with. She's also using pictures in my face
on her profile. I'll here tosay that. Okay, So I'm going
to read some of these messages.Okay, so she says, um,
(36:37):
we're kinky as fuck with red lips. Okaymoji seemed to be mister and missus
naughty ass. My chains are ringinga naughty tune, sex on my hot
piece of ass, and then abunny, a black cart, pink carts,
chains, fire chains, and ashooting shooting start. I enjoyed our
(37:00):
hot shower time while you were singingmy religion. I love your mohawk haircut,
baby, I can't wait to seeits standing up like a rooster cock.
Will dood will do, but onlyyour cock will do? Night love
have pleasantly what dreams of me?I'm so excited to have Alice's wonderland with
all my playthings. I don't knowwhat that means, Hi, baby,
(37:23):
no need to fear your Alice lovesyou might love stay in your head sweet
ms. Think of you all?Wait, think of you all the love
Alice shows you? What think ofall the love Alice shows you? Wait,
where's the one? These are all? It's like it's like it's funny,
right because like she's clearly a weirdo. Yeah, but like this is
(37:44):
like very much having his personal space. Like I mean, it's like imagine
like you don't want to deal withthis, like you're in a a marriage,
like you have a life, andlike, yeah, you do this.
You're on this app as a creativeoutlet, like and that like something
that should be making you happy,and like you're being harassed. Like it's
(38:07):
such a pain in the ass.It seems so fucking annoying to happen this
ship all the time, Like allthe time. It is funny just the
things that she's saying, because theydon't make any sense sense. Yeah,
and they're not in a physical relationshipyeah, or any type of relationship and
(38:28):
she's acting like they are. Yeah. So then she says, Okay,
hi baby, I hope you sawmy page. I love you till the
moon and back and can't wait tosee you in December. It's been a
long time coming. Love your Alice, and I saw that one, and
I told him. I was like, you know what, like you need
to go follow a police report becauseshe may show up at your door,
(38:49):
like she does have his phone number. Oh yeah, I think she has
his address. Yeah, I thinkhe was able to find his address online.
I think yeah, um and um. And then she's followed up and
said, I thought you looked smokinghot and Romeo's distress. This this kid
accat loved it. Meow, justridiculous. But then she follows up after
(39:13):
that and says, please stop hurtingme, like I'm afraid that, like
she's going to try to turn thisaround on him. Yeah, you know,
like I don't know, so Isaid, go to the cops,
like even if they think, like, oh, this is completely ridiculous,
like she's just sending you messages likeI got on Smeal. I have access
to her user name. I wentto her profile. She literally has her
(39:38):
picture and his picture like melted tolike their ticket side by side, like
like they are a couple. Andand then in her bio it says mister
Massacre with like an engagement ring.Like it's so over, like it's becoming
alarmed, Like I think we've passedalarming. Yeah, like yeah, like
(40:00):
so, um, he said hewas gonna go file police report, and
I told him too. It waslike, you may go down to the
police station and they may not takeyou serious because it's like, oh,
it's just an internet person, butstill doesn't matter if they laugh or whatever
happens, Like, just go doit so that you have a paper trial,
right, yeah, in case shejust tried trying to show up at
(40:22):
his door, Like what, well, this person is clearly off the rocker.
Yeah, so you honestly don't knowwhat this person is capable of,
and that's what's scary too. Yeah, and you just gotta be better to
be safe than sorry, you know. Yeah. And and then he said
(40:45):
to you that they have pets,like and he's afraid for the pets because
you know, crazy people always gofree pets first. Yeah, what we're
talking about? What are we talkingabout? In today's case? That is
crazy racist man went after poor Lula'sduck. Um. Yeah, so,
and I think too, because likehe is a man. So it's like,
oh, whatever, you should justbe laughing it off or you know,
(41:07):
not taking it serious. No,you need to take it serious,
you know, Like, yeah,I don't. It doesn't matter if it's
a man or not. You know, it's yeah, this is just getting
out of hand because no, andhe's not engaging. I think that's like
the the it's not like he's evenlike hey stop, like he's saying nothing.
(41:31):
Yeah, And it's just back toback to back to back to back
messages. Every single day she's sendinghim another message yeah, and like crazy
shit, And it is like anugly feeling time someone like invading your your
world all the time when you don'twant them to be there, and you've
already said stop several to you knowwhat I mean, Like yeah, um
(41:55):
so anyway, so I just wantingto give you guys an update on that
one. We'll keep you posted forme here. Hopefully she stops. And
I'm wondering too. Um. Idid a little investigating. I googled her.
Her user name popped up anywhere elsebecause I was like, I wonder
if she's done this to like severalpeople, and maybe that needs to be
(42:17):
the next step is like reaching outto people on smeal that she's following to
see if which I'm going to emailhim and tell him too, if she's
having the same kind of exchange withthem. Yeah, which I don't think
probably maybe maybe not as severe becauseit's like she's making him her profile picture.
(42:38):
Yea engaged to her apparently, Umso I don't know is he married.
He's married, right, I'm prettysure he's married, married her in
a relationship with someone. I wonderwhat his spouse thinks. Oh my gosh,
she's probably so annoyed, and Iwould be and I would be afraid
(43:01):
for her too, you know whatI mean? What didn't she does show
about your door and then she's thereand she's like what the fuck? Like
Kurt, you know what I mean? Like, oh my god, this
is some like movie type shit.Yeah, there's some Lifetime bullshit saying yeah
crazy, which I have been watchinga lot of Lifetime Christmas movies. I've
(43:22):
been really enjoying them. Okay,cool, That's how I know. I'm
thirty. I'm officially thirty years old. I've never watched a Lifetime Christmas movie
before. But I was like,oh, just i's take a gander effort.
I got nothing else to watch makeyou cry? And I loved them.
I was like, oh shit,I've been missing this my whole life.
(43:44):
Well, thank you mister Massacre foryour update. Yes, please keep
us updated. We'll talk more,yeah, um, with you personally,
and then if there's big things toupdate, yeah, well update. But
um. Just as a lesson,be careful with the people you meet on
the internet, you know, yes, yeah, keep yourself protected, all
(44:07):
right. Next Stranger Danger is anaudio from Morgan. Okay, wait,
Morgan saysps, I'm from Canada.Didn't even say that, and this happened
in Calgary, Alberta. So ifyou'd like, you can warn your list.
(44:28):
Okay, well warn't well, Okay, this is a warning don't move
into boarding houses in Calgary. Okay, thanks for the warning, Morgan.
Now I'm really excited to yeah,to listen to this. Okay ready,
yeah, hey, ladies, Ilove your podcast and I heard all of
the most recent episodes that you're runningout of Stranger Dangers. So I thought
(44:50):
this is the perfect time to contactyou with one of my craziest in recent
history, stranger dangers. Possibly inmy life. So I moved out to
go to school when I was twentyfive. By that I already engaged to
my fiance. He didn't want tomove, so I moved to a different
city about two and a half hoursaway from my hometown. But myself the
first time moving out and I hadreally bad judgment. And the second place
(45:15):
I lived in was set up ina boarding house. It was actually the
oldest boarding house in that city thatit was located in. And I moved
into one of the basement speets.There was two basement speets, and I
moved into one of them. Theother one was empty when I moved in,
and or the lady got kicked outmaybe anyway, so it's at empty
(45:36):
for a while, and I hadno problems with anyone. I was barely
there. I was always at theschool seven am till one am, and
then it came home, cooked andwent to bed, started all over again.
So after a few months, someonemoved into the other apartment and we
got on fine. She was anurse. She was like fifteen years older
than me. I was like,we had one conversation. Life was good.
(45:58):
So I never really thought about itagain. I never saw her because
we had different schedules. She workedshift work and I was always at the
school. Like I said, Soone day I get a text from my
landlord that there's been some complaints aboutme, and I'm like, hmm,
that's weird how because I'm literally neverthere and I'm so quiet. I even
ripped the firelarm off of my illegalbasement sweet ceiling because it was so close
(46:21):
to my stove and every time Icooked, the fire alarm would go off
at two am, and I didn'twant to wait people up, so I
just ripped it off. And I'mlike, fuck, if this place goes
up, I'm done for anyway,because the walls are literally stuffed with garbage
bags for insulation, so it doesn'tmatter. I don't need that fire alarm.
So basically, she had said thatI was breaking into her apartment,
stealing things, robmenting through her ceiling, which is very random. She said
(46:49):
that I had my friends playing NickiNicki Ninder on the doorbell on our suite
all hours of the night, andit's like I've had like even food.
I'll meet them at the top ofthe stairs because I don't want them ringing
the doorbell too, because you canhear it throughout the whole house. So
no, she said she watched meand a friend vandalized her vehicle and I
was like, nope. I've neverbeen negatively involved with the law except for
(47:15):
one time, but that's another story. And I was a stranger and that
stranger danger, so I will tellit to you. But anyway, I'm
really bad at telling stories quickly,so I'm trying to hurry. Sorry if
it sounds scarbled. So anyway,all these complaints, and I was like,
well, all I can say isI'm innocent, Like I didn't deal
with the ship. I'm literally inour home, asked my teachers. There's
records at the school, like Ihave to swipe in and out if we
(47:37):
need to take this further, Ican prove my innocence. And my landlady's
like, well, I'm not goingto do anything about it because you're moving
out soon, you're graduating, andshe's going to be here. So that's
just how it is. Just putup with it. Then she called,
not the landlady, but the womancalled the cops on me, and so
(47:58):
they came on the weekend and Iwas like, fuck, I've never like,
I don't know what to do aboutthis. I don't know what to
tell you. I haven't done this, Like I can prove my innocence,
and they're like, no, no, it's fine, we just have to
check in do a follow up andstuff, and I was like, Okay,
well, they're like just trying tostay away from her. I was
like, yeah, I'm trying.Then she starts to lean on the door
(48:21):
to my suite and talk shit atme through the door. You're gonna fucking
come out and fight me, Likeif you're you're just gonna do all the
ship up behind my back and blahblah blah, and I'm like, fuck.
So I started as a twenty nineyear old woman. I started climbing.
I'm also six foot by the way, so picture of this a six
ft twenty nine year old woman.I start climbing out my basement window.
(48:43):
I brought my bed up, Iguess the wall so I could hop out
my basement window and get to mycar that way so she wouldn't see me.
It got so intense, And forthe record, my vehicle was the
only one vandalized, not hers,so I don't know what she was talking
about. Yeah, so that wasmy stranger danger, super crazy, one
(49:05):
of the weirdest things has ever happenedto me. And I guess the world
of the story is, don't haverandom long conversations with her housemates and expect
them to respect you. So yeah, keep at the great work and ill
taught to you next time. Bye. What a weird situation, dude.
There was a show on I DTV, WE TV and I don't remember,
(49:29):
but it was about like people whohad like weird neighbors and like there was
one episode where this girl, likeshe moved into a place and it was
like it was her own place,but her neighbor would like be constantly like
knocking on her walls, and thenshe would see her outside and she started
like chasing her around. Like shegot really weird. You have to be
(49:50):
so careful, Like it sucks though, because you move into somewhere like you
don't know her neighbors are a fuckingweirdo. Yeah, how do you how
do you like prevent that from howhappening? You can't? Oh my god,
how crazy weird it sounded every timeshe was every time Morgan was saying
(50:13):
she was she had a proof ofinnocence, I was like, this sounds
like a damn trial keeping a logo. When she came in wait, when
she made a noise Sunday at twopm, I dropped a cup. Damn,
that's crazy. I have to say, I'm glad that I'd never had
(50:37):
any altercation or lived near any weirdneighbors. Yeah, I never had weird
neighbors either. I probably was aweird neighbor. Definitely you are the weird
neighbor. Just see. Well,you know, well, thank you Morgan
for your audio. Yes, thatwas a really crazy story. I would
(51:00):
how long you stayed there until youmoved out? Yeah? Or what else
happened? God know what what happenedto the people that moved in afterwards?
Yeah? Weird? Yeah? Crazy? All right, all right, next
step, we have another audio frome Hey e oh okay, these are
(51:25):
just kind words for us. Thankyou very much. We appreciate them.
Thank you. Okay, Justine,are you able to play this or you
want me to my last say?If I can do it. Y'all know
my phone is a little finicky.O oh okay, here we go are
Renny. Yeah, there we areDanger Brittany and Justine. Oh my gosh.
(51:53):
I'm not excited to be calling him. I'm a stranger, Danger,
but I am excited to be likecalling you guys, because I've been listening
to your podcast for a long timenow and I love it. I'm also
a Vegas native, calmed down.But yes, the Vegas native I comment
on you guys is IG all thetime. My name is E. You
(52:16):
can just call me. So let'sget to this stranger freaking danger. I
live in Brooklyn, as I said, and New York and itself is a
very busy, bustling, lots ofpeople place, and after living here for
a little bit, you kind ofjust developed this little stayment on little bubble
(52:38):
and keep it pushing even though you'rearound like a thousand people every day.
It's exhausting. So my story isthat I was going to the store midday,
mid afternoon. You know, it'sa nice day. I'm like,
let me walk to the store.You walk everywhere in New York. That's
just how it is for the mostpart. So mid beautiful day, sunshining,
(53:01):
I'm feeling all good. I feelso good to be outside, you
know, listening to my music inmy own zone. As I'm approaching the
store, it's like half a blockaway, and I see that there is
a pass because knowing who she is, like on IG, like, yeah,
she's literally walking through life like this. Yeah, okay, ready,
(53:24):
okay. It's a homeless man atthe door, and they usually do that
to like open the door for youand maybe you'll give them some money,
some change or whatever. My thingis that I've learned that in New York,
just my kind of personality, I'mway too friendly, and people take
friendliness the wrong way. So Ikind of have to know who to be
(53:44):
friendly too, who to just likesay hi to, and a normal kind
of fashion. It's the strangest thingbecause if you are too friendly, then
people want to talk to you forthe rest of your walk wherever you're going
or are they just ask you allthese questions like trying to get your number,
your name, where you live in, what's your birthday? You like,
I hate just smiled at you,sir. So that's just the normal
(54:07):
polite people thing to do. Ineed you to fall back. So I'm
approaching the store and I'm like,okay, you know, just be polite,
don't be too friendly. Good inthe store. So as I'm approaching,
he opens the door for me andI just say thank you, walk
on in. And this particular store, there's always only one person at the
(54:28):
cash register and the line is likeall the way to the back of the
store. It's ridiculous. It's freakingridiculous. So I get the things that
I need, I stand in line, and I know that I'm gonna be
like in line for about ten minutes. And me, I have this way
of just like filling vibes, andwhen I saw this man outside the store,
I automatically got like this weird,this weirdod vibe, like oh shit,
(54:50):
like oh fuck, you know,just in it out. So I'm
like, okay, whatever. I'mwaiting in line, I'm looking at the
door, like maybe he'll leave bythe time I need to get out here.
So I noticed that he's gone,and I'm like that in line,
like ten more people us like ooh, I don't have to worry about that
man anymore. So as I getall my bags and I'm carrying like heavy
(55:12):
stuff, I look at the doorand bam, he's back there. So
I'm like fuck. I have myheadphones on and turn my music up so
I don't have to. You know, if somebody talks to me, I
feel obligated to talk back to thembecause I just think it's so rude.
It's fucking rude, and I don'thave it in me. I'm not a
rude person. Asserted. Maybe Ineed to become a little bit more serious.
(55:32):
But if you say something to me, I'm gonna talk back. So
I turn my headphones up so Idon't have to hear. If he does
say anything to me. As I'mcoming out, he opens the door for
me, and I politely just saythank you and keep walking. Now I'm
walking back home, of course,and I'm about two or three blocks away
from this store, and there's likethis little neighborhood off of like off the
(55:54):
main street. There's this little neighborhoodand I usually cut through and that's how
I get home. So I'm walkingwalking, like I said, a midday,
beautiful day, I take my shortcutwalk through this neighborhood. It's beautiful,
quiet, picturesque. It's just youknow, I love walking through it
because of all the flowers and thenature or whatever gives me a little bit
(56:15):
of calmness in the bustling city.So I walk all the way down the
block. I make it right tothe shortcut. Walking down the street of
that neighborhood, I'm like halfway inbetween the neighborhood and something's like, girl,
look back, and I'm like,what is that intuition? So I
(56:35):
look back and at the end ofthe corner is a homeless man, and
as I turn around, all ofa sudden, he starts shouting. He's
like, miss Smith, you needhelp with those bags. I'm like the
funk I've got. So I juststarted running, running, running, and
I see these guys doing construction onthis house. So I just run up
their stairs. I put my bagsdown. I like wave at the guy
like I lived there. Hey,how's it going? He looks at me,
(56:59):
he waves back okay, And thenI just sit there like in my
mind, I'm thinking, if hecontinues to walk up this block at LASTA
have these construction workers, and nowthat you're following me, like I feel
like I'm assertive now you're following me. So my plan was if he was
to walk up the block and tryto talk to me, I was gonna
get a real like no, Idon't need your help. You need to
(57:20):
leave me alone. That's something you'rehard for me to do. But you
know, I gotta I gotta womanup because you ain't about to hurt me.
And I trained for this kind ofinteraction. So I don't see anybody
coming up the block, and I'mjust sitting on the stairs. And then
finally, like seven minutes later,I like waved down one of the construction
(57:44):
workers and I'm like, hey,is there anybody walking up the street and
he looks he's like, no,no, there's nobody. I'm like okay,
So I grabbed my bags and he'slike, were you being followed?
And then make a couple of theconstruction workers come by me and they're like,
you're being followed. I'm like yes, But then that's also like a
tricky situation. So I'm like,you know, I'm not damzel, I'm
(58:05):
no damsel in distress. So I'mlike, thank you guys, and I
just like grab my bags and walkaway. I must have sped walk so
fast home because that shit was soscary, Like you literally left your post
at the store where you was atwork getting your money to follow me down
(58:25):
a block and then to make arite and follow me like halfway down that
block and you're on the corner.Na, bro, not this not this
beautiful day. No no, no, you's not gonna sd you me.
That shit was so scary, andjust the look in his eye, I
knew he was one of those weirdotypes. And I'm not trying to prejudge
(58:50):
you, bro, but you're aweirdo and I knew it, and the
fact that you followed me, Oh, that shit was really scary. So
I'm like laying in bed then tellingmy boyfriend the story and he's I'm so
sorry that happened to you. I'mlike, well, I don't think I
should be getting the heavy stuff atthe store anymore. He said, Okay,
no problem, I will do itfrom now on, and I was
(59:12):
like, thank you, bet,because no, that really was scary.
And sometimes, you know, Istill kind of see him like in my
mind, like, oh shit,I hope I don't bump into him again
on these streets because that was wild. You don't follow people. I don't
care if it looks like they're carryingheavy stuff. You don't follow people,
bro. Anyway, that is notstranger danger. And I will continue to
(59:38):
listen in. I love you,guys. I hope one day when I
go back home to Vegas, wecould have some drinks together and turn it
up. Now it's the thirties club, Yes, all right later guys.
Gals. Oh, she's so cute, so freaking cute. I love her
(59:59):
energy, dude. She just likeher Instagram number one just it's like very
happy. Yeah. Yeah, shekind of reminds me of my friend Julia.
Yes, always happy, We'll alwaystalk to someone. Yeah, just
(01:00:22):
like a good soul, you know. Yeah, a very social person hardly
has a mean bone in their body. Yes, unlike me, where all
my bones are mean. But youknow though, it's good though, kidding,
because you're friendly and you're like agood person. You have manners where
you like say hello to people.I imagine that if someone was in your
(01:00:43):
way, you would say excuse me, you know, on like most people
in this world. And I meanI have manners, I mean yeah,
but I'm just saying, like,it's good that you also have a backbone
to say, Okay, you pushedme too far and now I'm gonna have
to whoop your ass offinding too,you know. Yeah. I like how
she was like, you ain't gonnasu oh shit. That was anie slapper
(01:01:10):
for sure. That was pretty good, pretty hard. Yeah. Yeah,
but it is very scary that thishomeless guy left his post at the store
to follow her, Like, that'svery scary. Yeah, and it's true.
You don't follow anybody if you wantto offer to help when they're walking
by you, like, hey,do you need help? Like and they
(01:01:30):
so cool, then you don't followthem. Yeah, that's scary, so
crazy. Anyways, Well, we'reglad that you got home safe and sounds.
Yes, and thank you for sendingin your story and thank you for
being like a shiny bright light inthe world. You know. Yeah,
(01:01:52):
we need more people like you inthis world. We do. Um.
All right, guys, that's itfor straight danger this week. Yeah,
if you would like to send inyour very own stranger danger, you can
do so at what is Our Thinking. It's about damn Crime at gmail dot
(01:02:13):
com. That's it, Or youcan head over to the website It's about
damncrime dot com. Click on thestranger danger tab a formal pop up that
Justine made herself, and fill thatbaby out. If you would like to
remain anonymous, you can do so. If you would like to send in
an audio, send that to ouremail because there's no other way to send
(01:02:37):
it. You can't send it tothe form. Correct, it's not that
fancy. Correct. Okay? Anyany new review? Okay? All right?
First up, we have a fivestar from still Boy two nine five
(01:02:57):
stars. Baby, there you go, short and sweet, thank you,
thank you. Next one we haveis a five star from It's Mitchen Sure
titled new Listener. I've been lookingfor some POC true crime stories because I
(01:03:19):
feel like all the other true crimepodcasts I listen to are just repeating the
same stories, and so far theepisodes I've listened to are all brand new
stories to me. I'm really enjoyingthe banter and dynamic the host have and
am looking forward to listening to oldepisodes to get to know these great ladies.
Thank you so much. Thank you. Keep the five stars coming,
(01:03:39):
guys, keep them coming. Ifyou're unable to leave us a five star
review, telephone a friend. Yeah, all right, Well is that it
for this episode? I think so? Episode one twenty six in the books.
Dang. Let's see if there areany discounts happening. Okay, November
(01:04:05):
twenty ninth through through the December first, there's a fifteen percent off everything no
no Code required. What am Isaved? What is happening December? No
November twenty ninth through December first,there is fifteen percent off of everything no
(01:04:25):
code required. Yes, and that'sat shop dot spreadshirt dot com, slash
It's about damn crime. If it'stoo long to type, just go to
it's about damn crime dot com.Click on the tab what is it the
apparel tab. Yes, click onthe apparel tab and it'll take you directly
to their no code needed. LikeJustine said, order yourself adie. You
(01:04:48):
know it's cold up, order yourselfa hoodie because hoodies are expensive. Yeah.
And it's cold outside, baby,it's cold out, baby, it's
so cold outside. Actually, it'snot cold at all here at all.
It's not really cold here either.It's uh, let's see how cold it
is here. It's seventy two degreeshere, it's eighty nine right now.
(01:05:09):
Fun nice, all right, guys. Well we'll see you in two weeks
time. Yeah, hope you allhave a happy Thanksgiving yea and friends Giving.
If you're having a friends giving,stuff yourselves with all the turkey,
(01:05:30):
the stuffing, the mashed potatoes,the yams, the collar greens, the
mashed potatoes, the pecan pie,the pumpkin pie, the apple pie.
H the green beans. That's allI got. Wow, the ham still
go one cool the corn. I'mgonna stuff myself with beer. That sounds
(01:06:00):
like a plan. Remember that videoof the lady I think she was a
who's in a church and stop blackLady in the church. She's like,
I got ham freeds, potato pato. No, but I love that.
That's a good sun. Can Iplease play it? It's the best thing
ever. Yeah, please do Iencourage it. Hold on, I can't
(01:06:29):
hear it. I got changed creas, potatoes, tomatoes, lam fad change
trees, potatoes, tomatoes, chicken. Somebody did a whole fucking remix of
(01:06:51):
it. Wait, where's the original? The original? Way? Just play
the original and just cut it down. Oh my god, the original is
like nine minutes. Oh hold on, let me spake and find it.
Hold on, okay, ready,huh. I got things greens, potatoes,
(01:07:15):
tomatoes, lamps, ramps, halt, dlts, chickens, turkeys,
reunion. Oh shit. Hey.If that doesn't put you in the mood
for some Thanksgiving dinner, I don'tknow what would. And I love the
remix of it. It's the bestthing ever. Oh my goodness. We
love that video. Oh man.But anyways, hope you all have a
(01:07:38):
happy Thanksgiving. We'll see you nextweek. Sorry, in two weeks.
In two weeks on December fourth,with a whole new episode. Until then,
Justine, remember there's a lot ofdesert out there, which I'm saying
to the turkeys, don't do that. You're the one who's eating the turkey.
(01:08:02):
You said at first, I alreadyate the turkey. You already done
killed the turkey. Okay, youknow what I forgot to do social media
whatever, follow us on social media. It's about damn crib or I D
purchase wherever there you go. Allright, guys, we'll catch you next
(01:08:24):
week. Love you, love youBye.