My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - 350 - My Favorite Murdaugh

Episode Date: October 27, 2022

This week, Karen and Georgia chat with the hosts of the Murdaugh Murders Podcast, Mandy Matney and Liz Farrell.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at... https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is exactly right. We at Wondery live, breathe, and downright obsess over true crime. And now we're launching the ultimate true crime fan experience, Exhibit C. Join now by following Wondery, Exhibit C, on Facebook and listen to true crime on Wondery and Amazon Music. Let's see, it's truly criminal. Hello and welcome to my favorite murder. That's Georgia Hartstark.
Starting point is 00:00:48 That's Karen Kilgariff. And this is a very special episode. A crossover episode with a podcast that we talked about a while ago that you guys know we all love. We're so thrilled. Our guests today are two investigative journalists who broke one of the biggest true crime stories of our time, arguably of our time. Through their fearless reporting, they took on the Old Boys Club in South Carolina and
Starting point is 00:01:13 exposed years of legal fraud, exploitation, and shocking multiple murders. This is welcome to the show, Mandy Matney and Liz Farrell. Hi, you guys. Hi. Hi, guys. Hello. This is so awesome. Yeah, this really is.
Starting point is 00:01:29 I'm very impressed by how you guys just did that. I was reading. I was reading up. We're very used to scripted. So this is different. Yeah. Oh, yeah. This is off the cuff.
Starting point is 00:01:42 This is, and first of all, we have to ask if everyone warmed up their vocal fry. Hilarious. Extra vocal fry today. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Absolutely. People are horrible. That's what we realized.
Starting point is 00:01:53 You just don't want public feedback kind of ever, but it made me laugh so hard, whatever. It was very early on when I was listening, and that was the thing you started talking about where I was just like, I guess this is just what every female podcaster is going to have to field if they have any kind of an audience, because this is the criticism that people love to throw as if it fucking matters, as if you're supposed to talk like Walter Cronkite. I'm not sure what they're looking for. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:28 First of all, I had never heard of vocal fry had you guys, when you got that feedback, I literally was like, what are you, I mean, I was not a broadcast journalist by any means. So I didn't even think about the way that I talked. Obviously everyone doesn't really like the sound of their own voice, so I just always thought my voice was annoying and so does everybody else, whatever, but I was shocked. I remember after launching, it was like three hours in, I started to get a flood of emails and the podcast wasn't, I mean, it didn't really get big for a while, but still a lot of people that had found it and the thought process of them like stopping what they were
Starting point is 00:03:08 doing and emailing me about how I need to fix my voice and I remember, I remember talking to Liz about it. I remember talking to David and being like, do I address this? What do I do? This is absurd and I'm really trying to get people to focus on the fact that there's really bad people and there's a real point to this podcast, it isn't like it's a comedy podcast or you're bantering, you're talking, you're just speaking about true crime. They're focusing on your voice.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Yeah. If a woman does anything slightly wrong compared to men doing things, even though the voice isn't even wrong, it's just how I sound. It's crazy and the other thing, I was just like, I'll just address it, who cares? What shocked me is the amount of successful women who reached out to me after that that were like, I got that too, blah, blah, blah, and it felt like it was like a community of support from women who had been through the same thing. I also got a lot of feedback from just our regular audience saying, oh, I had no idea
Starting point is 00:04:17 you were dealing with all of that on top of being an investigative reporter in a super stressful case, you're getting yelled at by your voice all the time. I could go on about how stupid vocal fry is, but in the amount of people who are like, you can change it, blah, blah, blah. That's right, because they compliment you, they're like, oh, you guys are doing such a great job. Yes. They start out with a compliment.
Starting point is 00:04:43 Sure. You're complimenting me, but then you're also talking about how terrible I am about something. Well, and also it's a preference thing that they're expressing, but I have preferences about male podcasters speaking that I could talk about all day long, and it's not just one thing, it's like six, and I would never think, because it's that idea that I have been trained in life to know that they don't give a shit, that they don't even care what I think. So why are women raised to, if they hear any feedback that's supposed to be considered
Starting point is 00:05:15 negative, they're going to change that right away? Because God forbid, they're not pleasing some mystery person out in the world. It's just like, what are you fucking talking about? And also, do you know how many people speak like this? This is normal talking. Yeah, I got to the point where I was like, well, it's not for you. Exactly. It's about like, there's lots of podcasts out there, there's lots of really shitty ones
Starting point is 00:05:38 from men. They talk about things that they have no idea about. Listen to that. I don't care. This isn't for you. And that's fine that people have podcasts out there that I don't like, but I'm not going to stop what I'm doing and be like, Taylor, your podcast to my personal needs because I'm just...
Starting point is 00:05:56 Can you imagine if you've lived your life that way? How exhausting. It's sad. But a lot of people, yeah, that's something that's really hit me in the last year. It's like, man, if all these people just put their energy to something else, just any... Well, that idea too of that you're going to stop what you're doing, where what you're doing is entirely a public service to expose some of the most insane white collar criminals and then straight up murderers.
Starting point is 00:06:27 This story, the idea that that would be anyone's reaction when the story you were telling and how that story rolled out was so goddamn insane. I couldn't believe what I was hearing on that podcast. I actually called Adrienne and I was just like, you have to start listening to this right now because this... I need someone to witness this with me because essentially, Mandy, in the very early days, you were breaking the story. As you were reporting it, you were then coming to podcasts to break the story on the podcast,
Starting point is 00:06:58 right? Talk us through that for anybody who hasn't heard Murdoch Murders podcast, essentially what that was. Okay. Like in summary, and I thought about this, this story is what happens when a powerful family and their circle of friends in a small town America get away with whatever they want for 100 years and that family produces Alex Murdoch and we're going to call him Alex today because it's known as Elick Murdoch and it's confusing.
Starting point is 00:07:31 They call it the South Carolina accent, we'll just call him Alex and make it simple. Oh, okay. It's a South Carolina accent. Yeah. In South Carolina, sometimes they call Alex as Elick, am I saying or Liz? Yeah, it's Elick and we had to do it because we're just to have any sort of street cred with the people we were talking to and it's actually several pronunciations. It's like, if you are actually in Hampton, you're saying Murdoch, like it's just like
Starting point is 00:08:00 spits out of your mouth like Murdoch, yeah, and even at his own firm, it seems like they were spelling it with the C, like they didn't even know that Alex is not pronounced that way. So I don't know. It's hard because it's just like you want to sound like you know, you know what you're talking about, but then it's just so exhausting to say it every time. And you know what's weirder is during court, he would sometimes pronounce his own name the right way.
Starting point is 00:08:24 So it's like he was aware, he is aware that his name is not the way most people say it. Yeah. So in court, well, we realize that in court, they do the way that it's spelled so the court reporters get it right. And then so in court, people are like, are you sure you're pronouncing this right? And it's like, God, this is... You could do a whole side podcast about this. I mean, it really could.
Starting point is 00:08:45 And I get, I get shipped for it all the time, like, why are you pronouncing it and like, I kind of regret it. Okay, so this family ultimately produced Alec Murdoch, who is now tied to five deaths since 2015. And again, not accused of murder and all five of those deaths, but tied to them in different ways. And the last year Liz and I were counting today and he's at 90 charges, I believe, between the murder of his wife and son, the biggest one, his suicide for hire incident, which
Starting point is 00:09:25 was just the craziest. That was the part of the story that just like sent everything off the rails. So it's like a fake suicide, but then we believe that the fake suicide story is also fake. Really? Yeah. Double fake. I really don't think it was suicide or any sort of, it was just, to us, it always looked like he wanted it to look like his family was being targeted.
Starting point is 00:09:49 Right. Got it. So this whole thing, like the world found out about the Murdoch family last June for the most part. It was making international headlines right after Maggie and Paul Murdoch were found murdered at their hunting lodge called Moselle in a very small town in the low country of South Carolina, which is just an area, the coastal area of South Carolina. And when that happened, Liz and I were like, our whole world's changed, right?
Starting point is 00:10:19 Because we were sitting on this pile of research for the past and reporting for the past two years at that point. Because when we were at the island packet to newspaper reporters, I guess we were editors at the time, we both started covering the death of Mallory Beach in the boat crash. Yeah. Tell us about that, tell the listeners about that one that kind of kicked it off. Yeah. Liz, do you want to take the boat crash?
Starting point is 00:10:46 Yeah. I think it was a weekend, right? And we got the call that there was a boat crash and we found out pretty early on that one of the passengers on the boat was named Paul Murdoch. And we knew that name vaguely at that point because we had heard about the Stephen Smith case really like within the last year before that and we're kind of considering taking it on. But yeah, it's this girl.
Starting point is 00:11:11 So Paul and his friends, there were five people that he had taken on a boat. They went to an oyster roast down the road, as you say I guess, on the river. And they ended up crashing really early in the morning and a 19-year-old girl from Hampton County named Mallory Beach went missing. She was missing for a week in the water, which was horrible. And they found her body and it basically from there, I mean, from the minute it hit go, we knew that we had to look out for corruption because we knew the thing that people said about the Murdochs was that anything they get into, as Connor Crocklater said, who was
Starting point is 00:11:47 one of the passengers on the boat, they can get out of. So we were just looking for like, were law enforcement, were they doing what they were supposed to, like what was going on behind the scenes? And it went, how many, it was two months before we saw charges. And it just actually seemed for a minute like we weren't going to see charges in it. So it was kind of actually surprising that that ended up happening, right? And that's because this family is, when you say a hundred years of this, it's because they're a family of lawyers, like a dynasty of lawyers.
Starting point is 00:12:16 Is that right? Not just lawyers. Yeah. So in South Carolina, the district attorney of a circuit is called a solicitor. So it's real old timey. And they are three generations of solicitors up until 2006. And then the current solicitor of this area is somebody that they handpicked to put in that position.
Starting point is 00:12:36 So they had him appointed by the governor and he's been reelected ever since. And so they are not only, you know, like what people say is the Murdoch's are the law here. And it's a five county system. So, you know, we're the coast where we live. So there's the boating and all that. They have their hunting lodges and the other counties in the rural areas. It's like their playground, basically. So everyone knows them in law enforcement pretty much.
Starting point is 00:13:02 And yeah, that's that you have a reputation of getting their way one way or another. And they had the law firm too. So they were able to, it's crazy, but like two sides of the law, they were able in this very small town, they had this very powerful civil law firm known for huge payoffs. But this isn't like one of those fancy law firms, like it's not like something with like Glenn Close. Like it's like, it's like, no mistake. Well, I want to ask you this, like you guys mentioned Stephen Smith and, and having kind
Starting point is 00:13:36 of a little tingle of something's not going to be not right. And we should look out for this Murdoch, you know, name. Can you bring us all the way back to 2015 and tell us that like, that's kind of the beginning of the story, you know, in a lot of ways for you guys, right? Yeah. So Liz found out about it in 2018 and she told me about it, but it was very vague. And like, I kind of remember, and I remember writing a little, a few things down, but I remember at the time being like, well, that's in Hampton County.
Starting point is 00:14:04 And you know, traditional newspapers, you have like a border that you work around. And if it's outside the border, then, and it was outside of Buford County. So it was like being on the moon. It was so far away, even though it's only an hour away. Well, so what happened basically when this book crash happened, we started seeing all of these post-online saying justice for Stephen and Mallory from Hampton County people, justice for Stephen and Mallory. And we were like, what's going, like, and Liz started putting it together.
Starting point is 00:14:34 And I started, I started just messaging anybody that I could from Hampton County, just like, what's going on here? What happened to Stephen? And within a week or two, we went to go see, we found Sandy Smith, Stephen's mom, and went to go see her in Hampton. And she had literally a kitchen table full of police documents that she had personally foiled and she had, and letters that she had written on the autopsy, everything. She was like, I'll get you, give you anything.
Starting point is 00:15:08 I just want anybody to look into this. She smelled that something was wrong from that case from the very beginning. And so Liz and I said, absolutely, we'll look into everything. And we pulled at those strings for the next two years, but there was no time to, with a story like that, where you have to go back in time and dig stuff up, especially the island pack of the newspaper that we were at was so small at the time. We were down, like, I remember how many reporters we were down. I don't remember.
Starting point is 00:15:40 But we didn't really have a reporter. Yeah. And we were just constantly pressured to produce page views and not do these deep dive investigative reporters, which is a big problem with journalism today and everything. It's a small paper, but we were owned by a big corporation. So we were owned by the MacLachy company. So you had the small town part, but then you also have this pressure from the big guys who want that profit.
Starting point is 00:16:04 And so Stephen Smith, his case got ruled a hit and run. And what about those police reports and all the reporting that his mother had uncovered made you think otherwise in this case? And he had been, it was 10 miles from the Mur.com was where the hit and run had happened. Yeah. So like in our free time, Liz and I, we got the investigation and we just started listening to all the audio interviews. Well, you got leaked the investigation.
Starting point is 00:16:32 I think that's important because if we were to FOIA the investigation, it would have been redacted and we wouldn't have seen half as much. So and it was because technically it was still an open case. So Mandy got leaked the entire case file or at least what looks like the entire case file. So for both of us, I would say it was the photos, right? Like for me and Liz, was it the photos for you, Mandy? Well, yeah. I mean, the photos, it did not look like a hit and run.
Starting point is 00:16:56 And we asked several law enforcement sources of like, what do you look for, blah, blah, blah. Showed them the photos. Yeah. We showed them the, yeah. And said it could this possibly be a hit and run. And I mean, most of the damage was done to his face. So how do you get hit and their conclusion was maybe he got hit by a truck mirror.
Starting point is 00:17:15 But like, think about that happening. And the Smiths will say this over and over there, like that's insulting to say that about her son. Like he was a smart kid. He was a nursing student. He wasn't going to let, and he was completely sober that night. He wasn't going to let a truck mirror, because you would have to, like it was just crazy. And then he also-
Starting point is 00:17:33 None of it made sense. None of it. None of it made sense. And then you look through the case file and everybody on scene and everybody who was investigating it didn't really believe it was a hit and run. And there's nowhere that anybody says, this is definitely a hit and run and here's why. The only person who ruled it was a hit and run was the pathologist, Dr. Erin Pressnell. And she kind of got into a fight with her troll and it's weird.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Remember us reading that document for the first time as we were like, I've never seen this in a- Never. I've never seen this in a case file before. It's like public officials basically talking shit on each other. Yeah, they don't put that stuff in writing unless they're trying to signal that something is amiss here. Wow.
Starting point is 00:18:18 So you think those cops on the scene knew something was up? Well, we think that they knew that it wasn't a hit and run. I mean, that is pretty clear, but as far as like who was pulling the strings, if strings were being pulled, not necessarily all of them. But it definitely, you cannot walk away from that case file without feeling like something. It really definitely was being covered up here. And the photos of him like from the crime scene, his or I should say the accident scene as they called it, his arms are sort of behind him and his knees are together and like sort
Starting point is 00:18:52 of splayed to the, you know, I think the left or the right. So it almost looks like you had somebody, you know, from our uneducated opinion holding him by his arms and somebody else holding him by his legs and dropping him on the ground and like, you know, where he would lay in place. And when Mandy says, you know, he didn't look like he was in a hit and run, you know, everything about him was pristine. I mean, like he had a few scratches on his arm, but when he has damage to his face, it's just one clear impact mark.
Starting point is 00:19:19 And it's on, I believe, the side of his head where had he been walking in the direction of his home, it truly would not have made sense because the car would have to have been coming oncoming and would hit him on the other side of his forehead. So it's just logic tells you, you know, this isn't right. And then how many times did we see Buster Murdoch's name in that report, Mandy? So I mean, the Murdoch name was brought up 40 times. Wow. Wow.
Starting point is 00:19:43 Just all of these people that they interviewed saying, we've heard the Murdoch kids have something to do with it, blah, blah, blah. And I mean, it just kept going on and on. But what's weird is that it just, the case all of a sudden just ended. Like they tried to call Buster Murdoch one time and left a voicemail and then the case was closed. Wow. Wow.
Starting point is 00:20:06 Not closed, but it went cold. Yeah. And then the other main thing that I keep forgetting to mention is there was no trace of any evidence of a vehicular homicide. So there was no mere pieces on the scene. There was no pieces of the car. Shoes were on, loosely tied. Like shoes were on.
Starting point is 00:20:24 There was just no one to get, no tire marks, which always happens with hit and runs. Even if a person keeps going, there's usually some sort of tire. Like again, it's positioning. Yeah. Let me ask you guys this. Cause now you're talking about things that go all the way to the top and these are some big scary people at the top. It could be, do you guys get worried about reporting on, and I know there was one incident
Starting point is 00:20:47 where you felt like you were being followed to get worried about reporting on these big wigs. That's why the vocal fry thing is so funny because it's like, I don't think people realize like we are, you know, having to protect our lives to a certain degree here in the sense that, you know, yeah, if a delivery person walks up to Mandy's house while, you know, we're here, we both sort of have that moment of like, is this it? Like, is this happening? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:11 So. That happens all the time. Yeah. We should probably go to therapy for it or something. Right. Seriously. You guys have dogs. I think get a bigger dog.
Starting point is 00:21:20 We do. Yeah. And like, I've really stepped up my home security system in the last year. And the other thing that's terrible about it is all of the, and people are being nice, but they freak me out even more. I mean, since 2019, I've been getting, be careful of the, like, I'm, I'm worried for you. I'm scared for your safety.
Starting point is 00:21:40 I hope you're being careful. Our friends in law enforcement say it. Our friends in law enforcement are, we had one of, so the incident that you're referring to happened when we went to go interview a source and afterward we went to the scene where Stephen had been killed. And this is like a wide open road. You know, these are, you know, like how do people know we're there? But our friend who is a cop begged us not to go.
Starting point is 00:22:05 And he was just like, you're not like, I'm being serious here. Like we, you don't need to be there. And sure enough, you know, we had him, we did our like location sharing with him. And sure enough, it ended up having, Mandy ended up having to call him because we were driving away from the scene and we didn't linger or anything like that. We're driving away, away and like in the distance, we can see like a silver SUV kind of coming toward us. And I was like, oh no.
Starting point is 00:22:31 And he stopped. So like, imagine you're on a two lane highway and you're going, you're driving the speed limit and he's driving towards you. And he, it's almost like he saw and they stops and then he does like a slow U turn and comes behind me. And it's a state highway, South Carolina highway patrolman, you know, again, like the highway patrolman here, they're not, that's not their thing like investigating murders, right? They investigate hit and runs are like highly trained in that.
Starting point is 00:22:56 And so these guys were handed the case for a reason if somebody was pulling the strings here. So yeah, it was a very sweaty, like scary moment. So Mandy called up our friend and had him on speaker just in case. And I'll tell you even recently, I was driving through, this is the stupidest thing I've done, I was driving through Hampton County to go to the courthouse, to go to the probate court. And I was like, why are you doing this?
Starting point is 00:23:22 You're an idiot. And I had forgotten that I had not put the sticker on my license plate. Like, you know, how they like update with the year. And so I was like, oh no, like it looks like I haven't expired license plate. So luckily I used to work for the Beaver County Sheriff's office for about a year and a half before joining Mandy. And the sheriff happened to call me. He just had a question about something.
Starting point is 00:23:46 You know, just like randomly. And so he stayed on the phone with me until I left Hampton County by his own suggestion. Like he was like, yeah, so, you know, just sort of hammer's home, like how seriously those around us are taking. So like obviously we're taking it very seriously too. Yeah. Well, and there, that is what gave it that very David and Goliath kind of feeling at the beginning of that podcast, because it's like, you guys essentially stumble upon one
Starting point is 00:24:14 story that leads into another, that leads into potential coverup that leads into this, that there's people waiting to go, I can't talk to anybody about this. Can I talk to you about it? And it's building a case against one of the most powerful legal families for hundreds of years in the area. So like that, yeah, that idea that that's, you were just basically like, well, we have to keep going. I mean, did you ever think I need to quit or I'm gonna quit?
Starting point is 00:24:43 No. I mean. Maybe we should. Did I want to? Absolutely. At this point, I'm just very tired of it. I'm like, God, I'd really like to wrap this up and now I'm just kidding. But initially, when we started talking to those first few sources in Hampton who were
Starting point is 00:25:05 so upset, I remember this one woman called me crying a couple, and Mallory was still missing at that point, and she was just like, this family has gotten away with everything and they're going to get away with this too. And this has to end now. Like somebody has to do something. And those words just resonated so much with both of us and Liz and I were just kind of looked at each other and were like, we can be the difference, whereas for a hundred years, there was nobody to, I mean, they ruled the paper there, they ruled everything.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Yeah. Everything, everything. And I do understand too, like, I will admit, I do not feel comfortable in Hampton County. Yeah. Things are getting a lot better, but I understood the secrecy and the fear that we were experiencing early on. Yeah. So like, sometimes we joke that this is like a haunted house because you are reading like
Starting point is 00:26:01 old stories from the past and you're like, oh my God, we're reading about the same freaking people who have the same names. You know, I'm not going to say real names, but like Thomas Smith, you know, the first and then it goes all the way to the sixth and so you just feel like it's never ending. So I think the culture, like, I don't feel bad for the people of Hampton County in the sense that they're good people. It's just that they live in a place where the industry is a law firm that has profited mightily off of its ability to control its juries.
Starting point is 00:26:35 And how it controls its juries is something that, you know, will be revealed at some point when it's not libelous to say. But yeah, it's so you have that they were known for their like astronomical settlements. So when Mandy found that document for Gloria Satterfields, that is Alex Housekeeper, Alec and Maggie's longtime housekeeper who died as a result of fall at their Mosel property. When Mandy found that document, I remember thinking like $500,000 settlement doesn't seem that big a deal, like, you know, could given that it's Hampton County. And as we found out, you know, it was much bigger than that.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Who gets a $4.3 million settlement for, you know, a trip and fall at a house. So that's because of that. That is where the power lies, right? So you have this firm that has helped all these people get these types of settlements. So you owe an allegiance to them in some way, or you just want to keep your head down and do your job and not, you know. So I think that's the hard thing about Hampton County. So they're so scared and they're not complicit necessarily.
Starting point is 00:27:39 Some of them definitely are, but some of them are, yeah, some of them definitely are. But the system is just old. It's like, it's set, it's old and new. It behooves you to stay on the right, their right side. Yes. Yeah. That's perfectly put. Yeah.
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Starting point is 00:29:57 Hey Prime members, listen to the Amazon Music Exclusive Podcast Killer Psyche Daily in the Amazon Music app. Download the app today. Well, how shocked were you guys when you're like, you're knee-deep in reporting all of this and this family and the unexplained and unprosecuted deaths? And then Paul and Maggie Murdoch, the son and the wife of Alec Murdoch, are shot to death. And that's while you're reporting on this case.
Starting point is 00:30:29 How shocking was that for you? Mandy was in Puerto Rico and it was the worst night of my life because I was at the sheriff's office and I got woken up by a source of mind when I was a journalist. And it was about 1.20 in the morning, 1.30, something like that. And he said Maggie and Paul have been killed, they've been shot. And I was like, wait, what? I just remember being oddly emotional about that, even though I really viewed those two people as abhorrent to a certain degree at that point, just because of everything I saw
Starting point is 00:31:01 the people around them being put through. And just for people who might not know, sorry, Paul, the one who was shot and killed, was the one driving that boat? Yes. That is Paul. Yeah. This is the red string connecting. This is your homeland red string connecting this whole insane conspiracy theory.
Starting point is 00:31:21 Yeah. That's absolutely right. He's charged for, is it manslaughter? B-U-Y. So it's boating under the influence. Yeah. Three felonies. Causing a death.
Starting point is 00:31:31 Yeah. And two, for the injuries of other people on the boat, for the passengers on the boat, and one for the death of Mallory Beach. So he was facing 25 years, I believe, in prison. Oh, yeah. Yeah. If you had to speculate, do you think that's why his father would have killed him, is just the shame or?
Starting point is 00:31:52 They don't feel shame. Alec Murdoch has never felt shame in his life. Oh, right. I forgot. I forgot people don't feel what I feel on a regular basis. Yeah. For real. It must be nice, right?
Starting point is 00:32:04 Yeah. The more that we think about it, the more that we put the pieces together, and again, this is still an active situation, and we have gotten very few actual answers from law enforcement for why the murders took place. However, we have found that the boat crash was really the first domino to fall that would ultimately be the end of the Murdoch family and their dynasty. Because it, A, put the spotlight on the Murdochs in a way that they had not had before. They were powerful, but they weren't in the spotlight.
Starting point is 00:32:41 They threw a lot of money to a lot of different political campaigns. They were doing their lawyer stuff, but they weren't in the media all the time. Normal people didn't know their names. We did it outside of where they're from. Their names weren't really well known. Yeah, exactly. And Hampton is very small. It's a really, really small county.
Starting point is 00:33:02 So everyone there, of course, knew their names, but anybody outside, I mean, kind of, and we'll get to that later, but it put them in the spotlight. And then right after the boat crash, there was a lawsuit filed. I believe, and Liz believes, really put a lot of pressure on Alex Murdoch in a way that he had not felt before on his finances, which we now realize is just a mess of criminal activity. Like, how could we even have predicted that? Right.
Starting point is 00:33:39 Yeah, I had no idea that it was this bad. It turns out he wasn't really a lawyer this, or a lot of the time he was just dealing from people, which is terrible in the most vulnerable people and the most vulnerable situations. And that's something that we've really wanted to highlight in our podcast is, like, look, these are financial crimes, but he was hurting these people and he really damaged them in a way that it's hard to explain until you have the victims themselves explain it. And they were very ruthless crimes just because they're white color or whatever.
Starting point is 00:34:13 They're still victims. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, those people where it's like, you're turning to a law firm to fight for your rights because, you know, the one I'm thinking of is the person who was paralyzed and for a car accident, they get a settlement. And then they keep, yeah, and then they keep, like, what, 80%, I mean, just a gigantic amount? They kept a portion of it.
Starting point is 00:34:40 It's so confusing. He was a quadriplegic, he was made a quadriplegic by that accident and he was also already deaf. And his family, obviously, before the settlement came through couldn't afford to keep him close to the home because he was just not that kind of care. So he was about, I think it was like an hour and 45 minutes away and sort of just vulnerable to the whole situation. So his settlement came through the timing of it so weird. And there's questions about whether he died before the settlement.
Starting point is 00:35:04 So whether Alec misrepresented that he was alive, you know, in order to get that settlement because had he died, it would have lessened the settlement altogether. So I don't know if he's still in most of it, it was just more that he's still a good bit of it, but he also pretended that, you know, definitely pretended that Hakeem was alive when Hakeem was not alive according to documents that we've found. Which is so terrible. Yeah. Just craven greed and, like, just fraud, just complete fraud.
Starting point is 00:35:36 Yeah, no care. Yeah. I mean, the amount, he clearly targeted people for their vulnerability. Most of their victims are people of color. Most of them were in horrible situations and Alex was also really good at looking people in the eye and saying, I got your back, buddy. And these people, and it's so horrible when you think about it, like, think of the worst time in your life and a person that you thought was helping you, like 10 years ago, that's
Starting point is 00:36:06 what the pink knees were dealing with. 10 years ago, all this went down, and, like, Alex was their lawyer, their guy, and they thought that he was doing the right thing for them and fighting for them. And he would say, look, we're doing everything we can. I'm so sorry about all that. He said all the right things to these people. And then now they're just dealing with pure betrayal, thinking back to the worst time of their life when they were so vulnerable and, like, thankful for this person who was
Starting point is 00:36:35 just robbing them. It was just so cold, and that's another thing that we've discovered. A lot of people, when the murders happen, and we're all over the place here because this whole case is all over the place. Yeah, yeah. It's unbelievable. It's just sprawling. We used to say that there's monsters around.
Starting point is 00:36:50 So in 2019, when we were reporting this, Mandy and I would, like, I mean, we were, we try not to say the word obsessed, but we were obsessed with it in the sense that we knew. It's like, when you get that feeling, you're like, something's not right. They're trying to pull one over on us. So we were just constantly talking about it, constantly researching outside of work. And, you know, we would talk about there being monsters around every corner, because with this case, it's not as simple. Even when I was driving here to Mandy's house today, I got a text from somebody that was
Starting point is 00:37:20 like, hey, did you hear that the guy who bought Moselle from the Murdochs killed himself? And I was like, no, no, I don't want to know that. Is that true? No, it is not true. But great. Rumor. Yeah. That's a step too far.
Starting point is 00:37:35 Yeah. But I would imagine, yeah, the rumors going around. Absolutely. Yeah. So the rumors, you're like, the most preposterous rumor comes, and Mandy and I are like, no, because most times it does turn out to be true. And that is where the monster is, like, around the corner, because it's a whole new thread that we have to look into and deal with.
Starting point is 00:37:54 So. Well, it's crazy how enmeshed. You guys are just totally enmeshed in this case now. It's almost like you're part of it because the podcast got so huge so quickly. And people are turning to you to hear about this story and to hear the truth about everything that's going on. So that's, that's a big responsibility. And then, yeah, you get these text messages of rumors and you're the ones who have to
Starting point is 00:38:14 sort through because you're part of it now. Yeah. Mandy. So I fully believe that Mandy is reporting over the summer of 2021. Had she not done that work for the organization she was working for, I don't think we would be where we are in terms of the investigations because she was holding them accountable singularly in some ways and forcing the issue. So she was forcing them not to be able to look away.
Starting point is 00:38:39 And I think that that's what was so brave, especially given like what we knew behind the scenes because we can only report what we can verify. So there's, you know, there's only a little bit comparatively to what we know. So it, yeah, it was, I mean, without that reporting that she did, I honestly don't think any of this would have gone this way. Yeah. Was it Alex Murdoch's lawyer when he started talking about Mandy, when he was giving his statements and stuff where you're just like, oh my God, it's like through the looking glass
Starting point is 00:39:13 where she's reporting, she's telling the story, trying to be like, you know, all her allegedly's and everything is, everything's in line and you're doing it totally by the book. And this man is basically like, this one's over here, whatever sexist thing that he said to you where it's suddenly you're just like, oh, she, this is actually working. Like these people don't want her doing this, which means something really huge is here. Yeah. Was that the feeling you got? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:43 Well, first of all, that story is so weird because I mean last and circling back to like just how crazy things were, I would not recommend anybody to start a podcast while, well, actually, I mean, it all worked out, but covering breaking news and then having to do a podcast at the end of my gosh, it was so hard. And there was a point after Alex was shot and things just real lawsuits were being filed and every like every day was just absolutely insane. And I was not getting any sleep either at that time. And I really did, I remember the first night that Alex went to jail, I finally like slept
Starting point is 00:40:23 okay for the first time in a really long, like, but the, that whole period of time was just really horrible for my mental health, my well-being, all of that. And I was also dealing with like just all these awful people telling me that they hated my voice. So stupid. I'm not, it was so stupid, but it was just a really like, I look back on that time. In my life that it should have been exciting, I mean, not, it was just very dark. And my fiance and I drove to the courthouse in Hampton that day to cover that volunteering
Starting point is 00:41:00 and that was for Alex suicide or shooting incident thing. And there was just a sea of reporters outside and it just looked like a circus and my stomach just dropped and I could not, you know, just that feeling and they say like, listen to your body, listen to your instinct. I was like, I can't go in. I just need to go home. And I remember texting Liz that day and she was like, you're not even sounding like yourself, are you okay?
Starting point is 00:41:26 Like, I was just not okay at that point. And then I go and I'm like, okay, whatever, the bond hearing is going to be covered online. I can cover it. It doesn't really matter if I'm there at the end of the day. And then as I'm watching and I'm getting all these text messages, like, are you seeing what Dickarputlian said about you, oh my God, oh my God, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And that was a bit, first of all, I was like, that was the first moment that I was like, okay, wow, the target is on my back.
Starting point is 00:41:54 Like they're noticing me. I didn't know before that point. Ultimately, I think he was saying that he considered me a threat there, even though he was saying I was a sexist bullshit. Ultimately, he didn't care about that as a reporter. He cared about me being there because I was the only one holding him and his little circle of buddies accountable. And the second thing was just like, I'm so glad I wasn't there because I don't know what
Starting point is 00:42:19 I would have done. The worst part of that was listening to all of those reporters laughing at his jokes about me, but I'm so glad I wasn't there because I don't know what I would have done. Right. And it's just one of those things where it's like, if you have that feeling, just follow it. Absolutely. And that was a big turning point of like, I need to take care of my mental health and
Starting point is 00:42:41 take a little bit of a step back from these things, but the unprofessionalism from them this whole time. It was a betrayal. Let's just call it what it was because it's a betrayal. You are breaking, you are making their jobs easier. There was an onslaught of national media here. All of them wanted to pick Mandy Pines, all of them just wanted a casual little coffee. Let me pick a grain.
Starting point is 00:43:04 What they wanted was her notes and her sources and her, so she's like fending those off at the time, but for local media in particular to have laughed. It sounds so minor probably to people not in it, but it was so indicative of the problem because it's like, you guys are the ones that were supposed to be covering this. Where are you? Like there are men in the room. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:27 These old white men in the room that you're like, you are chumming it up just so that you can get a scoop from this guy later. And it just showed you like you guys were the guys in charge for a long time and now you have a girl who's come on the scene and she's saying the things that you guys whitewash. And at that point, I mean, we can't forget the week before, it was just pure utter chaos after the moment he got shot because the lawyers were pushing out this narrative to all the media that laughed at me with Dick Harputlian that somebody's after Alex Murdoch and they're going to have a suspect for us soon, a guy, they had this whole narrative that there was
Starting point is 00:44:16 a guy in a truck that was following him and that he stopped to change his tire and that's how he got shot. And the PR company, by the way, let's not forget that there's- And a PR company was behind. Yeah. And I was the only one to be like, this is bullshit. And everyone in Hampton County, everyone was like, first of all, that guy never changes his own tires.
Starting point is 00:44:37 Totally. So let's start there. The road that they were on, he was saying it was on his way to Charleston and it wasn't on the way to Charleston. Like the story was so bad and it was just a pure example of how the media was not just doing their jobs and they just wanted to have their little quotes and make their little stories and their big headlines and get lots of clicks because the story was a click mine. It never mattered either.
Starting point is 00:45:04 So the Murdochs are so used to just being able to say what happened. I can just say that the sky is green and people are like, I see it too. And we don't have to look into it more. So for him to say all those things and no one to fact check him, they were not used to being fact checked by law enforcement or clearly the media. I just remember seeing and correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe it was an article in The Guardian. Was it The Guardian?
Starting point is 00:45:32 Where when it went, so this starts as local news and slowly you're watching it spread into a national news story of this happened, now his wife and son are dead, now someone quote unquote tried to kill him or shoot him, which is what you guys are talking about. That's bullshit. And then basically this is how I found out about it was this article in The Guardian that was basically like, here's what's going on and here's the one person actually chasing down what's happening. I felt like that was such a great, that article really was about how alone you were and how
Starting point is 00:46:12 you basically were holding up this journalistic ethic to go, we need to figure out what this is because this has gone on like enough people have died, enough people have been ripped off. This has to change. And suddenly you're getting global, I mean, I wouldn't say you're getting the coverage, but like this story is being told accurately to how you're seeing it as opposed to the good old boy journalists that are laughing along with Dick Harputlian. I mean, did that feel good because I was thrilled when I read, I was like, retweet, everybody
Starting point is 00:46:44 has to read this. Oh my God, what is happening? Yeah. Drew Lawrence is one of my favorite reporters and he's actually a friend of mine now and he was the one who wrote that story and it was just so validating when it came out because it was just like a thank you and from that he approached his conversations with me totally different than like, look, I don't want to, I'm not competing with you in any way. I'm not trying to retell the story that you've obviously covered for years now, but I want
Starting point is 00:47:13 to tell it about how it's been for you and the journey for you and what's going on with journalism. And I was like, oh yeah, let's do that. And I also feel like I got very, I was very misunderstood in those months last fall from people thinking that like, I didn't want other media covering the story. I don't care about, like they could cover it, please come investigate this stuff. It's very hard. Just do it accurately.
Starting point is 00:47:40 Yeah. Like just tell the actual story. Tell the actual story. If you didn't uncover it, give credit to the reporter who did uncover it. Like it's not that hard and don't treat the victims like dirt. I was so sick of getting phone calls last summer of like, from victims being like, this reporter's in my yard right now and they won't leave. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:48:02 And these people were not used to anything like that. Like the story just exploded in a way that nobody ever predicted and all of these people were left very extremely hurt by it. And the media was making it worse for the most part. Yeah. Right. And the reason why I really started my podcast, I had wanted to start a podcast for years and told Liz about it, but we were, we were always like, had a pipe dream about a boat
Starting point is 00:48:27 crash podcast because we thought like, there was plenty with the Stephen Smith case. And it was one of those things like, one of these days we'll do it and you just don't get to do it. But I remember listening to a national, some sort of talking head on the news talking about this case after the murders and they were saying like, they obviously had just Googled the case. And what they could find was that there was a boat crash and a girl died in the last couple of years.
Starting point is 00:48:55 But their conclusion was like, that means it's probably one of the victims from the boat crash. And like, have they looked at the boyfriend of Mallory Beach? I bet he wants revenge. And they were just really revictimizing all of these people who had gone and these are kids, like they were 19, 20 when this happened and now they're like 22, 23. And Liz and I were just like, we didn't know for sure who it was at the time, but we knew it wasn't the kids in the boat crash.
Starting point is 00:49:22 And we also knew the basic fact that like people in Hampton County are utterly terrified of the Murdochs and they're not going on their property and shooting Maggie and Paul. That is the riskiest murder in the state of South Carolina. So the narrative was just getting so wrong and like Liz said, there was a PR company. We can't forget that, but we don't know what they were doing behind the scenes to push this narrative. So I was really motivated just to just like, here's what's really going on with this family. And that's why it sucked that you were in Puerto Rico then because you know, you get
Starting point is 00:49:59 the call and like just like with the boat crash, but even to a greater extent now, you just know like the fix is going to be in. We have a small window of time right now for somebody to say what's actually happening because if there's going to be a cover up, it's going to be starting now. So I had texted her, called her and I, you know, obviously it was like late at night and I didn't expect it, but I couldn't go to the scene because I worked for the sheriff's office and that would have been inappropriate. But I contacted her boss at the time and was just like, you know, here's this information.
Starting point is 00:50:32 He published it as soon as he published it, I texted it to a former reporter that we worked with because it didn't, I just wanted it out there at that time. But what bothered me is just like, so when Mandy got back, like finally, because it's like, if you don't have a guardian of the truth and keeping people honest, like somebody like Mandy, it's just all going to be the same again. And you know, whatever they get into, they'll get away with. And so if they're, if Elec did it, if he hired somebody to do it, if it was something related to the Murdoch's like, it needed to be done now and media needed to understand that story
Starting point is 00:51:04 from a corruption standpoint, not a, oh, somebody got murdered or two people got murdered. And it's tragic. Not to basically make Elec the victim, which arguably, and from my very ignorant point of view might have been the reason those murders happened in the first place since, since everything else was avalanching down and everything was kind of getting exposed. That would be a way to report it that would absolutely benefit him. So I mean, not, I have no idea what really happened or why, but that idea where it's like, yeah, you have to get somebody in there going, no, no, no, we have to keep everything
Starting point is 00:51:41 in context. And the context is not good for this family. Yeah. And the context isn't good for a lot of law enforcement. I mean, still at this point, we don't know why it took so long to arrest Alex. And that's another thing we just go back to and like, what would they have done if we weren't there? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:02 Yeah. But the point of it was the point of that story and that podcast when we put it out was that, look, we're not really sure if law enforcement is going to do anything with this case. We think that they are and we, we do have good sources that are saying, we're doing everything that we can, trust me, blah, blah, blah. But there was evidence that we do, they could have arrested him with a long time ago and we're just not sure. There's just so many accusations of corruption that we had to put everything out there to
Starting point is 00:52:35 keep the pressure on. Yeah. And it worked. Yeah. I mean, like, it really worked. You guys did an unbelievable job and you did it in the way, it's like, not that I know the difference, but like old school journalism where you're just like, we're going to do the thing, we're just exposing this to the light, to the truth, to the public.
Starting point is 00:52:55 So it's like, you're just reporting what happened. You're not saying anything. It's not, you're not doing clickbait stuff. You're basically like, this has to go on record and, and it has to go on record the official way to say, here's the real story, don't let anyone tell you differently. Like we're on the ground, all the fact checking and the stuff as opposed to here's an unbelievable story about this weird double murder. What could have happened who really knows where you're just like, no, really, this is
Starting point is 00:53:22 important to say what did happen. We need to find out someone needs to look into this. That's what was so thrilling to me as like the, as a listener, this is like two women holding up the lantern alone and, and in the face of old boys club, like centuries of corruption, the deepest corruption where the kind that people say there's nothing you can do, give up and you guys didn't, you've bought it. It's pretty amazing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Yeah. And that was something we were talking about earlier. Liz has always said from the beginning, like a big thing that really took down this dynasty is just technology and social media and that's something the good old boys are very bad at and, and don't understand and they can't control it in a way. And so we were, we were like, we don't even know what grandpa grandpa buster and all of them, what they did because the internet didn't exist. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:54:26 And it was way easier to get away with stuff back then than it is now, even though for powerful people, it's still way too easy in my opinion. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I think a really important question would be who's going to play you guys in the made for TV movie about this podcast, dream, dream role, like dream person, who would it be? I'm not kidding.
Starting point is 00:54:48 Karen, actually. Hey. Yeah. Hey. We're soul sisters, so I'm Irish American too. We got the same. Oh my God. Same sense of humor.
Starting point is 00:55:00 I think, yeah. I'm all about it. Liz, I think I could really do justice because like when I listen and you do your little jokes, you do your reporting, but you're also like, and can I just say, like I, you coming into the podcast too, because I, there were, there were points where I was worried about Mandy, whereas it's like this is a person alone doing this thing, doing this reporting or whatever. And you coming in was really a lovely, beautiful, like the partnership, working and supporting each other.
Starting point is 00:55:31 You could just kind of feel how nice that was for you, Mandy, that you had another person to look across and go, holy fuck too, which makes all the difference, right? Yeah. As you guys know, I mean, having a partner you absolutely trust and who understands and who, you don't have to explain all of the background and all the other shit that's involved because they've been in this. It's monumental and so changing and just like a huge weight was lifted from my shoulders when Liz was able to come on and then she brought humor and light and I mean, I'm not
Starting point is 00:56:07 going to lie. There's a lot of weeks where I'm like, I don't know what we're going to talk about next week because I don't know what's going to happen. And Liz is always like, we got this or, and we do have a good thing with our partnership of like one of us is down, the other one goes up. We're kind of like a seesaw. Yeah. And it works really well.
Starting point is 00:56:24 Otherwise, I would have just said, I mean, I definitely would have quit at this point. Because it's just, it's too hard and I think people need to realize that like nobody needs to do this stuff. It's way too hard and we all just need to support each other and keep going, you know, and do everything that we can to keep going and take care of ourselves, especially if you're fighting the old boys club, those old crusty reporters laughing at you or wherever where it's like, that's fine. Now that you know that there's like millions of true crime fans who were like so behind
Starting point is 00:56:57 you and so thrilled about the work that both of you are doing and like how you powered through like this is how you power through awful stages of life. You just keep going and you figure out who your team is and how you get the support you need and how you can take care of yourself and like step out so someone else can step in. But I don't know if you realize how inspirational that looks from the outside as, as hard as it is for you, you're modeling such beautiful behavior, not just as journalists, but like as a team of women.
Starting point is 00:57:30 I'm trying not to cry. Yeah, me too. I want you to cry. Cry, cry, cry. We love it. No. It's true though. You get us.
Starting point is 00:57:38 But thank you. That's so sweet. Which is why it's so annoying that people are like, change your voice. It's like, that's not what it's about. Change your voice is a trick. Change your voice is a distraction so that you stop doing what you are doing. It's bullshit. We got to be more Gen Z about that shit.
Starting point is 00:57:58 Those kids would just be like, what? Fuck off. Who cares? The change your voice people don't know what the fuck they're talking about. It's so weird that you say that because I'm Gen X and Mandy is obviously a millennial. That's like us. Oh my God. It's us.
Starting point is 00:58:14 It definitely is. And we, like when Mandy was going through that and she was like, should I address this? It's so dumb, right? You're like vocal fry. Why are we talking about this? But it was like my instinct as somebody older was like, no, just ignore it, ignore the haters. But Mandy was like, look, if I'm going to be holding people accountable for their behavior here in this story, like in the context of the story, I need to hold other people accountable
Starting point is 00:58:36 to you because their behavior matters as well. How you treat people matters. And so she, by doing that, like at first I was like, oh, maybe you shouldn't mention it. But then I understood it and like it was so brave of her to do that and it has changed my complete philosophy on how, how to address people who hate you. I used to have a thing I would do. Like if I got a hate mail at work, I would send an email back and be like, can't win
Starting point is 00:59:00 them all Jim. And I always felt like superior for that because I was like, haven't I slept, you know? But by Mandy saying honestly and like authentically, you are hurting somebody when you say this. And it's not just like you are, you are needlessly putting something out there that doesn't need to be put out there. And I'm going to call you out on it. And that has been one of the biggest lessons that I think I've learned in all of this, especially as we've dealt with so many very unsavory characters and all of this.
Starting point is 00:59:29 It's that lesson right there that I think is so important. Yeah. A lot of people say, just ignore it, ignore it, ignore it. And it's like ignoring it. A lot of times, yes, ignoring it is the answer because nobody wants to waste. Is that your guys' philosophy? Not mine. I'm sure you're going to hate it online.
Starting point is 00:59:45 I'm learning. I'm learning. There is, it is hard and it does sometimes feel like I want to have a conversation. I want to respond. I want to stand up for myself. Yeah. Then there also is the part of it's like, well, what if it, what if they're right? And what if, you know, and that's where you can't respond?
Starting point is 01:00:01 Yeah. And I'm sure no matter how successful you get, you're always going to get that little voice in your head saying, well, what if, what if my voice is annoying? Yeah. Am I? Am I? What if my show does suck? Right.
Starting point is 01:00:14 Take it in, do what you want, but it's like, you can't really ignore it classically because ignoring it makes it seem like you can have it not be in your head at all. Once you read one horrible thing, it stays there. And that's my thing is I get that it's impossible to ignore. Just don't let it get you off course. Don't actually let it make you change anything or redirect your plan, which you guys didn't. Like you got to express the strength of vulnerability by going, yeah, that really sucks. You can stop now, but you, it didn't make you stop reporting.
Starting point is 01:00:48 It didn't make you stop going out and being the person that you are. That's the important part is like, you stayed on track and it wasn't like, well, now we're going to, now I'm going to go to a vocal coach and I won't be recording this podcast until I get my voice right. Like absolutely not because that's how you basically make women shut up is pointing out that they're not doing it right where it's like, we don't need women to shut up these days. We need women to stand up and you did.
Starting point is 01:01:16 Well, and like women, like women in television, it's like, when podcasting it's, do we have the appropriate, whatever, I don't even know what the opposite of a vocal fry is, but feminine, I don't know. I mean, do we sound like a guy, do you sound like a male reporter? I think is essentially what it is, or do we sound like a bro? Do we sound like what we're quote supposed to sound like, which is so stupid because podcasting is so new that there is no what it's supposed to sound like. But boys can, men can sound like whatever, like it's just their voice and their content.
Starting point is 01:01:48 And but like, I have a lot of friends who've been TV reporters over the years and TV reporters go through so much shit about what they look like and those girls do not get paid nearly enough and their bosses also criticized them for how they look in a way that they do not criticize male. So on TV, they have to worry about so many extra things besides the content and it's just so much. And again, people give me a lot of shit online for saying it when I say like, this is a sexist thing.
Starting point is 01:02:23 Let's just call it what it is. I don't have statistics on this, but I know male reporters do not go through what people are trying to do. Absolutely not. You don't need statistics. You just don't need like living in the world. Yeah, we all know. Yeah, it's walking outside.
Starting point is 01:02:38 Yeah, entirely. Well, what's next for you guys? Anything non-murdoch related that you're excited about these days? We are trying. Silence. Yeah. You're like, absolutely not. Mandy, you're getting married.
Starting point is 01:02:53 Oh. I'm getting married next month. Sometimes exciting. So this whole time you've been planning a wedding. That's insane. Yeah. Yeah. I got engaged a week before the double homicide.
Starting point is 01:03:04 She was celebrating her engagement when it happened. I was, yeah, I was in Puerto Rico and celebrating my birthday and then my engagement and new beginnings. And yeah, but we've figured out how to plan a wedding during all of this chaos. Wow. Good for you. And, but yeah, I mean, we are now trying to focus on, I think, what we've realized is that our approach to journalism does work, where Liz and I have both spent a very long
Starting point is 01:03:34 time in the newspaper industry just getting trampled by old white men who are making very bad decisions for a lot more money than we were making. Of course. And we want to empower other journalists to be doing the same things that we are doing. Like I'm not convinced, I know that there's not going to be a lot of Murdoch stories to repeat. You know, I hope not. I don't want to find another monster like this ever again.
Starting point is 01:04:04 Yeah. However, the podcasting investigative journalism model really does work. It finances journalism, podcasting advertising works. A lot of people don't realize that in a way that, I mean, I was always told since coming out of journalism school, there's no future in journalism. You're never going to make money in it. It's just going to suck forever. That's got to sound great and exciting to hear.
Starting point is 01:04:29 Enjoy your student loans. Yeah. And my parents were all the time like, are you sure? Why are you doing this? And every, even like my counselors in journalism school were like, are you sure? It was like, it's just been a very, very uncertain, terrible industry to be at. And I mean, if we want to talk about, wait, because that's what we were taught that it's an uncertain industry to be in, but what's uncertain, and this is what Mandy and I figured
Starting point is 01:04:54 out when we were working at McClatchy, is the profit model for the people at the top. So you get sold, the people that are doing the work of the content creators or whatever we want to call them, we're the ones that are being told like, I don't know about this. You might be laid off next week. And it's like, why? Because you get a $35,000 a month stipend just for your house rental. On top of your $2 million salary, remember that one? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:19 Right. That was a real thing. Yeah. We were having layoffs in our newsroom while we found out that our CEO was making over $2 million a year plus a $35,000 housing stipend a month. And our reporters were making $35,000 a year who were getting laid off. But I think people conflate the idea that journalism, there's no future in journalism with, there's no future for that profit model because it's too many people doing too little
Starting point is 01:05:48 for too much money. But journalism itself is a means of communication, it's storytelling, it's watchdog, it's accountability. That has always been necessary and it's always going to be necessary. And it takes us, I think that's why, what we're thinking is that we want to motivate other journalists to do the same thing while also solving that problem in different communities. Because there's so many cases that just go unsolved because lack of motivation, incompetence is obviously always a thing. But corruption is always a part of it, almost always, I shouldn't say always.
Starting point is 01:06:24 But there is some sort of, whether it's noble cause corruption or just straight up corruption. So that's what journalism is for, to stop that. Yeah. And you're right. It's like the evolution of it instead of saying, well, this is a dead thing or whatever. It's like basically this model of journalists having podcasts and journalists doing like the long form reporting of like, no, there will be an audience for this because there is a huge audience for true crime, for people, this is the reason people follow it.
Starting point is 01:06:54 It isn't just gore, it's about getting to the truth, exposing people like exposing these monsters in plain sight. All of that, that's what I think, that's what is behind the true crime trend. It's just like, we want to witness what these, you know, reporters, journalists, whoever it is are talking about and saying, no more of this. Yeah. No one wants this. This is crazy.
Starting point is 01:07:19 You shouldn't be a lawyer that gets to rip people off and or kill them if it suits you. That's crazy. Like nothing should be this corrupt. It seems to be the way it's going. I think what we figured out is if you remove the, I don't want to say like white, I hate to say that, but like, if you move like the old school white men from the equation and journalists are left to do their jobs, my God, like how far they can go without having to feed that beast, you know?
Starting point is 01:07:46 Yeah. Well, you guys are showing it. And are motivated. I mean, I feel like a lot in journalism, they make you feel like you took a vow of poverty and if you make like an extra cent, but like money motivates everybody to do better. Especially if you're, if you're making like $35,000 a year, like I used to be making, you're worried about all these other things in your life because you're barely making ends meet.
Starting point is 01:08:12 And you don't have time or energy to go investigate and take down a time to stay because you're just, you're just trying to get through your job and, and you go to get drinks with friends and like the waitress is making way more money than you and you're like, why am I doing this? This doesn't make any sense. So like journalists need to be paid a lot more and that's something that we're going to base our model off of, of like, yeah, they need more money and because this is as stressful as work as lawyers do and in a scary, you know, like, so they need to be paying more and that's just something that nobody ever talks about.
Starting point is 01:08:51 But I will say that I, I think that society needs to be better at cheering on people who are making money for doing the right thing, like instead of just, instead of just shaming people for, oh my God, you've made money off of some sort of true crime. Like no, if somebody's doing the right thing and if they're empowering victims and if they're helping people and if they're taking down systems and they should make money and that's fine and we should encourage other people to do the same thing. Yeah, yeah. Somehow it's only honest if you're, if you're suffering through it.
Starting point is 01:09:27 And that's the trick. Well, what's funny too is like, meanwhile, the Guardian newspaper, one of the best newspapers in the world is like, check out what this badass woman is doing and it just like, I think you guys got the ultimate validation of like, check this shit out, look at what is happening, look at this corruption and look at the one person fighting it at first at the beginning before Liz made her entrance, fighting it alone. To me, that was so impressive because I was just like, wow, this newspaper is basically pointing out a reporter that's just kind of like taking up this battle by herself.
Starting point is 01:10:02 People love you. People love you. You need to know it. Aw, you guys are awesome. And I wanted to say thank you so much for, first of all, retweeting that. That was like, I guess I have a lot of fans. True. A lot.
Starting point is 01:10:14 A lot, my sister sent it to you, so my sister doesn't listen to my podcast as far as I know. My family never does that. So they are both my sisters. Mine doesn't listen to mine either. My sister's obsessed with you. She's like, oh, can you get them to say hi to Ashling? I was like, nope, not on the checklist. Hi, Ashling.
Starting point is 01:10:33 Hi, Ashling. Aw, yeah, she doesn't listen to our podcast, but she sent that and she's like, oh my God. So it was a huge moment. It really was. It was awesome. I love it. It felt so good. So you guys have said such nice, these are really meaningful things because we are going
Starting point is 01:10:52 to replay these in our heads because it's stuff that we need to hear because we're in our own little smaller world because of us. And so it's hard for us to know how it looks from the outside other than the people that sort of tap you on the shoulder and they're like, you sound terrible. But so it's really, thank you. Our pleasure. The great thing that I've learned in all of this is just how it's going to sound tacky, but empowering the sisterhood is.
Starting point is 01:11:19 And I have just been the amount of super successful women, like you have retweeted us and helped us so much and so many people who have reached out and said, ignore the haters if you need any advice, blah, blah, blah, I mean, that has been life changing for me. And like this whole podcast and the story of the success is really a story of women helping each other. I mean, the very beginning, our only advertiser was a, there are friends now, but the band and long group who was a female attorney, she is the biggest fan of you guys. I guess she is.
Starting point is 01:11:58 Oh wow. Meredith, she went to your show in Charleston, like she is like the biggest fan in the universe of you guys. Like I just think back to her empowering me at the very beginning and say, no, you need to keep going and we'll keep funding it. I don't care. Like you need to keep doing this and exposing these people because I mean, so many women that have just kept this thing going and I'm just so thankful for it.
Starting point is 01:12:24 And it's just been a huge light in all this darkness, you know. Yes. Our fan base, yeah, has given us everything. We talk about them all the time. Like so many amazing women who are all, you know, when George and I used to go on the road, like we'd meet people in real life and just be like, every person that we're meeting is cool and like us. It's the weirdest thing.
Starting point is 01:12:44 Like there is such a faction of women who have come together under this kind of like quote unquote, you know, pastime or interest, but actually what they're discovering is we all need each other and we all are here for each other and there's just so much, you know, it does feel corny to say empowerment, but it's the best word for it because that's really what it is where it's just like, we need to know that that connection between each other is actually changing the world. It really is. No, it's true.
Starting point is 01:13:16 It's corny. I'm sorry, but it's fucking true. Like they're doing it. They're all doing it with each other and for each other and it's just really cool and I'm glad you guys get that piece of it because that's kind of the point. Yeah. I think that's kind of actually the biggest joke in all of this is because when we think about like people, when they want to like be derogatory, they'll call us bloggers and
Starting point is 01:13:36 it's like funny to think like you can call it, you can think the least about us. It's kind of funny that we're the ones taking down the poochie archie. Yeah. Yeah. That's right. Amazing. Well, we are honored to have you guys here. Such absolutely incredible journalists, professionals like wow.
Starting point is 01:13:57 On our show, thank you guys so, so much. Yay. We're honored to be here. Oh my gosh. This has been so fun. Well, you guys can find the Murdock Murders podcast wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes are released every Wednesday. Make sure you rate review, positively review and subscribe.
Starting point is 01:14:15 Mandy and Lizzie really, really do appreciate you guys being here with us. Thank you so much. Yeah. You guys have to come to Hilton.net. We will take you shark fishing and it will be a great day. Hang on. I haven't seen it. Low country.
Starting point is 01:14:28 I've got to check it out. Yeah, you really do. It'd be amazing. We would like to repay you. Yeah, I could think two wedding invitations or I know, right? I know, right? On the way. I'll call David.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Congrats. Thanks again. Bye. Bye. Elvis, do you want a cookie? This has been an exactly right production. Our senior producers are Hannah Kyle Crichton and Natalie Rinn. Our producers Alejandra Keck.
Starting point is 01:15:01 This episode was engineered and mixed by John Bradley. Our researcher is Marin McGlashan. Email your hometowns and fucking hurrays to myfavoritmurder at gmail.com. Follow the show on Instagram and Facebook at myfavoritmurder and on Twitter at myfavemurder. Goodbye. Listen, follow, leave us a review on Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, Prime members, did you know that you can listen to my favorite murder early and
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