Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We got a question from Berck moments, Dear mamas, have
you seen the Netflix documentary documentary Unknown Number. Well, let's
ask maryan mama's Alma Mama, she said, and joining us
(00:21):
now our American mama's Terry Nedville and Kimberly Burlson. Not
only have I not seen it, I haven't seen anything
even about it. So yeah, I guess my show prep
is lacking today. I have no idea what this is.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Well, this particular docu series is kind of like taking
the world by storm right now, and it's about this
young girl who was cyberbullied for two years. Oh wow,
And it was like relentless horrible. The most horrific things
you can imagine were sent to her. Go kill yourself.
You are worthless. You are like you imagine the worst,
most vile, sexual, disgusting things were said to her. So
(00:58):
after two years, police get involved, people get interviewed, accusations
of different people. Finally, and this is a spoiler alert,
it is her mother that did it. They find out
it's her mother who's been doing it for two years
and every So what's hilarious right now is on TikTok.
(01:19):
People are videotaping other people's responses to watching it. You know,
so if you've already seen it, you want to get
I want to get Terry's response when she sees when
the moment that they say it's the mother. But what's
interesting about this is the mother is interviewed and she
says that she was doing it out of love. And
it sounds like some kind of Munchausen.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
Right, it's a cyber Munchausen by proceressy.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
She felt like she was helping she she says, which
everyone believes is a lie. She says that the first
text were someone else and that she wanted something to happen,
and so in order for something to happen, she had
to keep it up a lie. Oh yeah, liar.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
You know I didn't see either. I was like you, Steve,
and I was I was unaware until I started seeing
the reels. So when Kim, I said, spoiler spoiler alert,
it's spoiled.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
It's out there.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
But there were people doing reels and they were kind
of doing a skit, you know, like a what do
you call it? Spoof? Spoof of it, and where this
one guy the first time I saw it was a
guy with a wig on and she was like he
was saying like pretending to be the mother, and he'd
say to the daughter, I love you, honey, Okay, you'd
be careful, and then he'd get on the and go
you little tramp, you little money, you know, like that's
(02:30):
with the Basically she was psycho. So I started reading
about it. I haven't watched it yet, but I was
reading about it. And what's interesting is the father. For
two years, you know, this girl had a boyfriend and
the mom would say things to her through the cyber
bullying thing, say things like your boyfriend, your mom's the
sexy one, your boyfriend wants to be with your mom,
not you, like really really weird things. So when two
(02:52):
years is over, the cops, the investigators, they finally said
to the husband, hey, we got we found out who
it was. And he was so relieved. Finally we're going
to get them and we're going to take them all
the way. He's going to jail. And when they told
him that it was his wife, he wanted to kill her.
He couldn't believe it. He could not believe it. And
she said that she was raped as a young girl.
I don't believe anything, she said, yea I think all
(03:14):
of it's alive. But she says she was raped and
and she was having some sort of weird she was
triggered in such a way that this was how she
was kind of getting back at that everything she said.
Now she realizes that she's so mentally sick. Not only
a mentally ill and twisted person does this to their child,
their beautiful innocent child who has struggled for two years.
(03:37):
What it did to her mentally, what it did to
her and you know, just psychologically, I can't even imagine it.
But how incredible in today's time with these documentaries that
they're able to go back and get these screenshots and
all these you know, conversations so that we can see
and hopefully it's a lesson.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Well, another little part of this that's kind of interesting
is so during the core of two years, you've got
all these accusations towards different people, like a different girl
on the team, and she got so much hate and
got so much so there were people that became victims
in this and it changed their lives just because of
the hate pounded on them. Because people would just assume, oh,
(04:18):
it has to be it's.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
A witch burner. Absolutely, I mean, that's that's one of
the things that that's I think the digital world has
quite clearly made obvious, is that we are not that
far removed from the Salem witch trials exactly that in
public shaming we will go just as far as they
would have back in the you know, the sixteen hundreds.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
Oh, we saw that in the cancel cultures. Yes, everybody
jumped on everybody exactly.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
And so if you've got a pariah on social media, okay,
well great, let's dox them, let's destroy them, let's go
after them, let's burn them, burner, she's a witch, turned
me into a newt that. I mean, all that type
of that still is going on. And so yes, if
somebody's accused of being the cyber bully when it wasn't them,
then yes, absolutely you've got the mob with pitchforks.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
And but then what happens to them, like, now you
know they went through all of that, They probably didn't.
This is so minute. But let's say a girl was
just stoned to death for that, she goes to college,
she doesn't get in a sorority, shouldn't you know, Let's
say that she had to suffer all the consequences and
be on a case. So then what happens now now
this is out, everyone knows the truth. Do people come
(05:26):
back and apologize?
Speaker 2 (05:27):
That's all they're saying. They're coming back saying I'm sorry,
I'm sorry, but I thought, but what is I mean?
What does that do? It's nothing. You've already destroyed somebody's life.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
It's like those football players that the girls accused them
of rape. They lose their whole four years and go
to jail, and then they come back and sorry, Like,
there has to be there has to be some sort
of accountability for that. You know, we saw this during
COVID with a cancel culture with Rosenbar, which seemed to
start it all. Something has to be done. When you
were that person
Speaker 1 (05:56):
I could like uskar America, Mama was a question good
our website America about radio dot com slash smolla's in
clear go to ask the Mama's button, turn out of
Kimberly Burls and thank you so much,