My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark - MFM Minisode 391
Episode Date: July 8, 2024This week’s hometowns include powdered chicken soup and letting a 12-year-old drive. Support this podcast by shopping our latest sponsor deals and promotions at this link: https://bit.ly/3UFCn1g L...earn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, listener, Karen and Georgia here. And do we have a summertime treat for you?
Kate Winkler-Dawson is back with brand new episodes of her true crime talk show, Wicked Words.
Each week, journalists, historian and host Kate Winkler-Dawson interviews incredible filmmakers,
writers and podcasters about the true crime cases they know best.
These are the stories behind the stories.
So stay tuned at the end of this mini-so to hear the trailer for Wicked Words with Kate
Winkler-Dawson.
And check out new episodes of Wicked Words every Monday wherever you get your podcasts.
Goodbye.
Bye. Hello and welcome to My Favorite Murder.
The mini-sode.
The mini-sode.
See what I mean?
That's what I meant.
When we say it really fast.
Oh, like say it actually fast.
Say, cause it's the mini-sode we say the whole intro fast. Let's try it again.
Okay. Hello.
Hello and welcome to my favorite murder. The mini-sode.
Oh, we're singing together.
We say together.
You're right. Sorry. I messed it up. It's like, it was speed over lines.
Okay, ready?
Here we go.
Hello and welcome to my favorite murder.
No, now we're not doing together?
Well, we say and welcome together.
Or I say and welcome.
Yeah.
And I say to my favorite murder.
You know what?
And you say the many.
I'm actually not even interested in what we say
or how we say it.
If we don't leave every part of that in, are we even being genuine?
Quality content.
Are we even real at all?
Do we ever tell the truth?
I feel like we're gatekeeping podcasting and we don't leave all of that in.
I think we're gatekeeping fucking up all the time.
All right, so it's settled. We're leaving it in.
We're leaving it all in.
You want to go first?
Sure.
This first email says episode 426 Hindenburg second hand hometown.
Oh shit.
Yes.
Keep them coming.
Okay.
It just starts.
I email you yearly.
Fingers crossed this one gets picked.
Wow.
The tenacity. Thank you. The
weekend after listening to episode 426, where Karen covered the Hindenburg disaster, I
visited my 100 year old grandpa who lives in Tom's River and worked in Lakehurst. 100
years. A septuagenarian? Centogenarian? A hundred years.
That's huge.
Incredible.
Happy birthday, grandpa.
His family moved from Brooklyn to Lakehurst
when he was a kid,
but I couldn't remember when exactly.
So I asked him where he was when the Hindenburg crashed,
as he tells it.
His neighbor, Joe Peterson, was looking out the window,
drinking a glass of water when he saw the explosion.
Joe and his wife, May,
drove over to pick up my grandfather and his parents to bring them to the crash site. My
grandfather, his parents, and their neighbors watched it burn. And my grandfather remembers
a man with a flower in his lapel coming up to their party, and then in parentheses it
says group, and it says, and telling them in a daze that he had tickets to ride the
blimp. So basically
remember it was landing because it was supposed to take off again. So that guy stood there
waiting to get on that thing and then watched it explode. During the months after the explosion,
my grandfather would bike past the crash site on the way to the local swimming hole and
pick up pieces of the Hindenburg. Wow.
His memory at 100 is better than mine at 40.
I got it.
So true.
And I left in the part where he explained party means group because it was part of his
retelling.
My grandfather didn't start telling us stories until his mid 80s and he never thinks they're
particularly interesting.
He's a World War II vet and has a cigar box full of pictures from the war, including the aftermath of Hiroshima, which he saw firsthand. So this person was at Hiroshima.
Oh my God.
And the explosion of the Hindenburg. Like what are the odds?
Historic person.
He has an incredibly detailed memory of his life from a very young age, but again,
didn't find it worth discussing until we discovered the pictures and asked about it.
You gotta ask you guys.
And then it just says, stay sexy, Liz. Liz, 40 year old Liz and her 100 year old grandpa.
I would love more stories if you have them
and if you can get him.
I would too.
A hundred year old grandpa telling his stories
and we get to tell them secondhand on this podcast.
I wish this podcast was going on with my grandma
who lived to be 104 was still alive
because her stories from escaping Russia are epic.
I think I have them somewhere, but yeah.
Did she have an accent?
She had something wrong with her vocal cords.
So she talked really adorably and in a very high, little...
So you couldn't really tell,
but she could speak Yiddish for sure.
So she didn't have a Russian accent.
No Russian accent.
So she had assimilated,
because was she a kid when she came to America?
Yeah, she was like a teenager
by the time she came to LA.
So she was like a preteen when she came to America.
Wow.
Oh man, that would be,
I mean, I've tried to secretly record my dad.
That's illegal in California.
It is, it's illegal.
It's actually impolite and a real breach of privacy because
he tells great stories, but he's just like the frog in the box from that cartoon where
the second you're like, gather around everybody. He doesn't. He won't do it. This is not an
ad. In fact, they haven't had an ad with us for a while, but story worth that we did ads
for a while back where you send someone story prompts and they write them, really did help my dad
write out a lot of things
that I wouldn't have known about him.
That's cool.
Okay, this story is like a great example
of one of the reasons I've always been obsessed
with hometowns, like this is a classic
someone's hometown story.
Nice.
This one's called Tragic Fate of a Forgotten Childhood Item.
Hi, friends.
I'm writing to tell you a story about the tragic fate of a long forgotten childhood
item.
As a millennial daughter of boomer parents, one of my perennial tasks is to help my mom
organize and scan the thousands of printed photos stored in unorganized, rubber-made
tubs in her attic.
One day, while sorting through images of my early childhood,
I stumbled across a sweet picture of my brother and I
squeezed into a brightly colored Mickey Mouse themed sleeping
bag.
Immediately hit with a wave of nostalgia for an item
I had totally forgotten existed, I asked my mom,
whatever happened to that thing?
I loved it.
My mom looked at the photo, took a beat, and replied,
oh, it went to the girl who fell. to that thing. I loved it. My mom looked at the photo, took a beat and replied,
oh, it went to the girl who fell. And then it starts with the story. Just 10 minutes away from my childhood home in Anchorage, Alaska, there's a park slash highway rest stop called McHugh Creek.
It's basically a cliffside with spectacular views of Cook Inlet just outside the city limits.
The thing about Alaska, even in the big city of Anchorage,
is that civilization gives way to the wild
with little transition.
This park is a perfect example of this.
As kids, we used to scramble over rocky hills,
dodging bear poop, and spent porcupine quills
with the audible hum of the busy highway just beneath us.
The focal point of this park is a waterfall
which flows into a rocky pool.
One day in the mid 1990s, we went to McHugh Creek for a picnic with my grandparents who
were visiting from out of state. There was a group of teenagers, two boys and a girl
who were climbing over the park barriers around the waterfall. My mom, a seventh grade public
school teacher, told them to mind the park signage. But as teenagers are want to do,
they declined. An hour or so later,
as we were eating our picnic lunch, we heard a terrible cascading scream. The kind of guttural
sound that can't be faked. The teenagers who had hopped the park barriers were climbing up the rocks
next to the waterfall. The two boys made it up to the top, but the young woman slipped.
She fell 20 feet down into the rocky pool below.
Even in Alaskan summer, the water would have been frigid.
As other park goers raced to pull her from the water,
my dad ran back to our car and grabbed
anything that might help, including our beloved Mickey
Mouse sleeping bag.
My dad and grandpa helped get her up to the road
where the paramedics could reach her
and my dad, unable to do anything else,
wrapped the sleeping bag around her.
My mom says the image of the ambulance doors
closing on this poor girl draped in her kid's sleeping bag
is seared in her memory.
While I can find no record of this event online,
my mom remembers reading in the local paper
that she died a day or two later in the hospital.
Oh.
We all do reckless things as teenagers,
and it's sobering to think that one decision,
one slip, one day at the park
could have such devastating consequences.
Yup.
Now raising a daughter of my own,
I can only hope that our little Mickey Mouse sleeping bag
provided that girl with some ounce of warmth and comfort
Stay sexy and mind the park signage KP
Also, that was it's KP's hometown, right? Yeah KP was there for it. No her mom. Yeah
She was like she was at the park because the family was having yes, I don't remember it right
So she's a little enough kid, but if she was older, it's firsthand experience of death,
even though it's like, it's not your grandma because she's old. It's not this reason that makes
sense. It's like sudden, shocking, young person. Everyone's panicking. No one knows what to do
until the ambulance gets there.
Like huge effect.
Well, I think it's also for us,
her mom's point of view of the story
and her mom has kept that story in her for so long
and never thought to share it.
And yeah, I don't know.
It's amazing.
It's amazing. It's tragic.
So sad.
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Goodbye.
Okay, well, I'm going to take us on a left turn right now.
Because the subject line of this email is my grandpa robbed his own bank.
Hello, all.
Longtime listener, first time hitting send on an emailer. I've started many
emails, but this one is my current favorite. So it's going off into cyberspace and hopefully landing
on a future episode. Hey, congratulations. Hi. It's future us talking past you saying congratulations
currently. I come from a shortish bloodline of bankers.
My mom's dad retired from banking
after working his way up through the ranks.
My mom retired a few years ago
after nearly 40 years in banking,
and I'm currently chugging along
with a whopping seven years in the industry.
I currently do marketing,
but also help out regularly on the front lines as a teller.
Luckily, my only interesting stories aren't that interesting, and I've had a pretty uneventful
teller career thus far.
I thought I knew my family's stories too, but recently learned that that isn't the
case.
Last week, my mom stopped by my branch and I was showing her our new fancy toy, the cash
recycler.
And then in parentheses, it says, it's the machine you might find behind the teller that
spits out the cash rather than keeping a bunch in your drawer, helps with safety, accuracy,
speed, et cetera.
Interesting.
Yeah.
We were talking shop and as a former compliance and risk manager, she brought up security
and what we do in case of robbery.
And then she says, you know, your grandpa used to test that
as his job.
Was he a secret bank shopper?
Bank robber.
Yeah, but like a secret shopper.
Bank robber shopper, yeah.
Oh my God, okay, tell me everything.
He's, you know what he is, is a secret bank shropper.
Shropper.
Sorry, sorry, I was stupid.
No, thank you.
Then she drops the figurative bomb, figurative is in parentheses, that in the 70s, 80s, to
ensure that staff was following proper robbery protocol, my grandpa would dress up as a robber
in all caps and go pretend to rob his own bank.
No.
Mm-hmm.
Think fire drill, but for robbery.
And not just kindly walk in with a sweet note, all caps, he was armed.
And to absolutely no one's surprise when hearing this, he even had the cops called on him,
like by his own coworkers who were probably scared for their lives.
Can you imagine being a sweet 17 year old working your summer job at the local bank
when someone comes in guns a blazing, demanding all your money just for it to be old Arden making sure you didn't give it all away. And
then it just says, oof. Oh my God. They don't let 17 year olds be tellers. Do they? I bet
they do. I mean, they must cause this is a banking family writing this email. I'm learning
this information on the teller line of my own bank with my coworkers, not any time in the previous 36 years of my
life. And of course, my mom waited until after my grandpa died, so I can't even fact check.
Dude, I have so many questions.
Right? Because they just referred to it as their bank.
Yes. Meaning the bank that to it as their bank. Yes.
Meaning the bank that she works at.
Right.
Because I, for a second, thought that this was
from just a really rich person that's like,
my grandpa had a bank and so he was testing,
but he just worked at the bank.
He just worked there.
It wasn't his bank.
The amount of people who could and should have been shot
in these stories is ridiculous.
I think the only reason that people didn't get shot more back then is because most people
were drunk during the day.
They had gone to a wonderful liquid lunch.
They had their cigarettes to calm them down.
So like a bank robbers, no big deal.
Yep.
Just smoking.
Oh my God.
The cherry on the top, at least to me, is that my grandpa was known by everyone he knew
as a very kind, caring, gentle man with a strong faith.
I got into trouble for saying dang in front of my parents.
Oh shit.
Don't tell them about this podcast.
Oh fuck.
You cannot let anybody in your family listen to this podcast.
I don't know why that makes, dang is such an old word that no one says anymore, but I do.
I think we should, I think dang needs to come back for sure.
Dang.
I need to readjust my mindset to just a simple dang mindset,
but oh, dang and awkward.
I like a darn it too.
Oh, so the sentence is,
I got in trouble for saying dang in front of my grandparents
while grandpa was at work traumatizing Roberta and making George shit himself at 2.30 on a Tuesday.
Oh my God.
I love the olden days.
And then it says, well, that's my story.
My family is relatively non-newsworthy and then in parentheses, not complaining.
So I'll be writing high on this one for a while.
Stay sexy and maybe don't try to rob your coworkers, Erin.
Erin, you fucking found the magic, what?
The magic.
The magic sauce of hometowns,
which was just as much the one you told,
which is the heavy, sorrowful,
and yet what we like to talk about side.
And then we come in with some grandpa icing to just be like, life contains multitudes.
Some grandpa, like 1970s, 80s shenanigans.
Did he wear a mask?
Did he wear a balaclava on his fucking face, like a straight up robber?
What kind of gun?
Whose plan was this?
I think we want, I'm going to ask for stories that were shenanigans from the past, like pre-internet
that couldn't happen now. That's what we want. We want stories that are, are you kidding me? That
couldn't happen now. Let's say you're sitting in the way back seat of the car with no seatbelt.
Like that's a regular thing that happened. Like we want to tell the kids like how lucky we are
that we survived to this day.
Yes, for sure.
And that basically the world we live in now
is because people started suing the fuck out of each other.
And then everyone went, oh yeah, don't do that.
Stop doing that.
You can't smoke at the gas station
while you're waiting for your gas, your tank to fill up,
which is one of my earliest childhood memories.
My God, everything's so fucked.
Watching my mom light a cigarette and roll the window up as we were waiting for the gas
to get filled up.
Vince won't even let me roll my window down when we're at the gas station and he's putting
gas in the car or get out of the car.
Like he has strict rules of like-
He's just like, stay here.
Well, he's just like, this could start a fire,
that could start a fire.
He thinks everything could start a fire.
You're not supposed to use your phone
when you're pumping gas.
Did you know that?
Yes, I've heard that.
I had a friend who, well, right when everyone
got addicted to phones, that became a real problem.
Because it was like, is this true
or is this just internet lore?
And then it'd be like, I'm doing it anyway.
But it truly could, it truly could.
Right, I don't know about phones these days,
but yeah, anyways.
Have you seen those videos of the guys
like in a mini-mart where their phone explodes
in their pocket?
Or their vape pen?
Fuck that, okay.
This is a crazy episode.
Yeah, it is.
This one's called, per my last email.
It's kind of long, but it's about the mob.
So we're okay.
Great.
It says, look, listen, you look fantastic.
Per my last email, I have a fairly decent story for you about my uncle in the mob.
You asked for it, so here it is.
I think this is someone who maybe was on the podcast before, and they were like, let me know if you want to hear about the...
We were like, yes, tell us about that.
That actually might be per my last email.
Like why?
Which great.
And but then also anybody starting per my last email,
as if they're like, I'm just going to keep sending these to you until you read it.
I love it all.
Yeah, it's good energy.
OK, per my last email, I have a fairly decent story for you
about my uncle in the mob.
You asked for it, so here it is.
All names have been changed to protect the,
well, all names have been changed.
Get it?
Cause there's no one to say it.
In the early eighties, my great uncle, Fredo.
Wow.
Fredo is F-R-E, Fredo, Fredo.
That's what it is.
Fredo, Fredo lays. I what it is. Frito, Frito lays.
I know, I was like, huh.
In the early eighties, my great uncle, Fredo died.
He was the very Sicilian uncle of my father,
therefore making him my great uncle,
as opposed to a great uncle, which he was not.
We went to his visitation and funeral
and the following chaos ensued.
Due to the fact that this was a Sicilian funeral, the room was full of very dramatic crying women, hairy men, and wildly unattended children.
Yay 80s.
While I and my siblings were running around the funeral home and drinking powdered chicken soup from the coffee machine, you fucking remember powdered chicken soup?
Oh my God.
Yes, did you just taste it?
The cup drops.
Yes.
The water goes, the powder.
I mean, was that it?
Or was it pre in the cup?
No, I think you're right.
I think it dropped powdered chicken soup.
They made chicken soup like coffee kind of.
Sorry, we were into bone broth
before it was fucking trendy.
Sorry, it was protein.
It was 30 grams of protein.
And it was all the salt for the week that you needed. And it was amazing. Such delicious
chicken soup. Mostly enjoyed at hospitals. And I'm so glad that was brought up. These are the
details that get you read from this podcast. A very solemn woman and her adult children entered the room.
When my great aunt, Dottie, saw them, she, all caps, lost her mind. In a full on panic,
she told family members that this woman and her children had to leave immediately. She went
bananas until they left. Dottie was not a nice person either, by the way. And then here's the story.
Uncle Fredo worked for a crime family in Milwaukee,
which was part of the Chicago outfit of the mafia.
He was in charge of quote,
coin operated devices like juke boxes and vending machines
and collected money for the mob.
Isn't that funny?
Like when you see parking meter people taking the money,
like it's just like those people used to be from the mob.
The idea that you go into vending machines,
like that for a lot of people back in that time,
probably the whatever the forties to the nineties.
That's like, I'm the heiress to the vending machine fortune
to the powdered chicken soup vending machine fortune.
Oh my God.
He also served as an enforcer when necessary.
That says very troubling.
As any good mobster, he was leading a double life.
The woman and children forced to leave the funeral were his wife and children.
Not his ex-wife, wife.
As in he had two wives and two families.
The wives knew about each other, but Dottie did not tell her children, adult children,
anything about their other family. So when they arrived,
she forced them to leave all caps, their father's funeral,
because she didn't want her children to know she'd been lying to them their
entire lives. You'd think there'd have been two separate funerals, right?
Or how about the wives, since they know about each other, get together and go, how are we
going to handle this?
Yes. Yours first. Yes. Your solution first.
Mine is giving everybody a huge benefit of the doubt that they could even have a sit
down, doesn't sound like it. But holy shit.
In case you're wondering, Fredo died under suspicious circumstances that were never resolved,
but I've been given no further details on that.
Dottie died years later of natural causes
and her children still have no idea about the other family.
They were both truly assholes, she says.
I was gonna say, but now with the advent of 23andMe,
they probably know a lot. That's
happening to so many people. Their children's children, absolutely, are going to put it together.
Secret Family Expose is what they should name that company instead of 23andMe.
On a side note, thank you for all that you do to promote awareness of mental health issues,
championing women's causes and being your true authentic selves all the time.
It's not easy. Thank you for creating this community and providing a voice for so many who can no longer
speak for themselves.
What you do is so much more than entertainment.
Please never forget that.
Oh my God.
Oh shit.
I'm getting...
I think I have to go get some powdered chicken soup and be by myself.
Oh my God.
Stay sexy and don't be an asshole.
Marie, my name is changed to she her.
I love her.
She's fun.
Per my last email, Marie Marie.
Amazing job, Marie.
Marie and she like took a name from the podcast.
Like that's the middle name you give everyone.
That's my, cause you can say it like Marie.
You can say it like a New York lady.
Karen Marie Kilgareth.
Yeah.
That's a good solid one.
Wow. That was incredible.
A plus plus.
It's so funny though, because isn't that just the way where
it's an incredible story of, you know, secret families and all the different things and the mafia.
But really the star of that email was powdered chicken soup,
vending machine.
Yeah. I mean, it's hard to top that ever literally with anything because it
congeals, because there's so much salt in it.
Do you do not want to put anything on top? No croutons.
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Goodbye.
The subject line of this one is just let the 12 year old drive.
Ahoy, ahoy, murder friends.
I've been meaning to write this story in
since a mini-soad featuring a literal child
playing designated driver reminded me of this family story.
I don't know the number, guess it doesn't matter, I digress. Whenever my family's around the table
at Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc., someone inevitably brings up the time my great aunt and uncle
let my 12-year-old aunt drive to the coast. This was before my time, so while I've heard bits and
pieces of it over the years, I finally asked my mom what the real deal was.
Apparently when my aunt was about 12, her aunt and uncle let her drive the car.
But not across the church parking lot like my cousin and I were allowed to do at that
age.
Oh no, dear Vader, they let her drive almost 60 miles between our small hometown and the
Gulf Coast.
This is what I want.
This is what I want.
Can you fucking imagine if that happened today?
Couldn't be done today, hijinks.
Shenanigans, you called it.
Shenanigans.
Oh my God.
And then it says 60 miles on the highway at 12.
12.
Right now, you might be taking guesses as to the time period of this particular story.
Was it the 70s, the 80s? Nope, it was the 90s, the very early 90s, but still. For years,
the anecdote was that they let her drive to the coast, but according to my mom, they actually
let her drive home from the coast. This distinction has led me to conclude that my dear aunt and uncle likely had a few
drinks in whatever revelry that they got up to with a 12 year old in tow and then decided
it was probably better just to let her drive.
A couple of Mai ties on the coast, on the Gulf Coast. They let her keep the umbrellas,
the little umbrellas that was in there. That was her payment.
Put it behind your ear.
Put it behind your ear. Put it behind your ear.
It just reminds me because when I was 12,
my parents left me and my sister home alone
because Laura was 14.
And the first thing I did after they left
was drive the car.
And my sister was so angry and I was so excited
except for I pulled it out of our driveway
and drove down the street and then had to make
what was probably a 30 point turn
in our next door neighbor, the Withingtons,
grandma's driveway.
Total nerds.
No, no, no.
Noni watched me,
cause she lived in a mobile home next to the family home.
So it was like the family
and then their grandma lived next door.
Noni, I love her.
Noni and she had a long kind of driveway
with a real angle to it.
And I had to do my 25 point turn using this.
So when I would go forward, I would go,
I couldn't see the street in front of me.
Like it was bad.
I did it as badly as I could.
She watched the whole thing and never told.
Hell yeah.
She knows.
Because she was the greatest woman.
She was the greatest woman.
She's no fucking narc.
No, she's not a narc.
Sorry, I called her a narc
because she's no fucking narc.
No, that's not her.
Can we do grandparents not narking on you
as a story too?
Okay.
Yes, grandparents keeping your secret
of being on your side as opposed to their own children's.
Because they hate their own children.
Let's be realistic. Anyway, point being, it was so opposed to their own children's side. Because they hate their own children. Let's be realistic.
Anyway, point being, it was so scary to drive 50 yards and this 12 year old drove 60 miles
on the freeway. With her drunk aunt and uncle.
Okay. And then it says, I mean, I guess good on them for not drinking and driving.
Actually. Yeah. I mean, sure. Sure.
Okay.
And then it says, on a more personal note,
I'll echo all of the many sentiments passed on
by other murderinos about the community you've built
and the lessons you've taught us.
While I'm not a day one listener,
you two have been in my ear for years,
getting me through earning my PhD.
Wow.
Congratulations on that. Wow.
And the nightmare that is the academic job market.
And then it just says, stay sexy
and maybe you just have an adult designated driver.
And then it's the initial C, she, her.
Oh my God.
That's amazing.
That was amazing.
Amazing.
Thank you, C.
Wow.
I feel like, Alondra, did you like write
the last paragraph of each of these
telling us that we're doing good things
because shit's been really fucking hard lately? Like shit's been a little fucking rough lately in this. And I just
looked at the last one I'm reading and it says something nice. And I'm like, Alondra. Guys,
I wrote all of these. And she's just going to edit it out. We're being very thoroughly produced,
right? In this time period. People are trying to get us through. Appreciate you.
Appreciate you. Leave that all in. Okay. Treasure from beyond. Get ready to cry.
Okay. This is my last story. Hi, Karen, Georgia and all the exactly right crew. I have many stories
I could tell you, but this one is recent and close to my heart. My mom passed away last week after several weeks on hospice.
I had gone home for the night,
but after my dad called me with the news,
I went back to my parents' house
so I could wait with my dad for the morticians
to come collect her body.
My dad and I were both devastated,
but he is a retired first responder
and I'm a middle school theater teacher,
so we both have a tendency to be practical in an emergency.
Yep.
After we said our goodbyes to my mom,
we started clearing some furniture and things
out of the way for the morticians so the gurney would fit.
We had folded the ironing board,
and I was trying to find a clear surface to set down the iron
when I saw just enough room on one of my mom's bookshelves.
As I put the iron down, a book caught my eye.
The complete language of flowers.
Even though we were in the middle of something
and I have no interest in gardening,
I had an overwhelming desire to pick it up and look through it.
TikTok would say, I have ADHD.
ALL LAUGHING
100%. But I think something or someone else was prompting me
because as soon as I picked up the book,
a card my mom had written to my dad fell out.
Even though they lived in the same house,
my mom would sometimes mail my dad cards
so he would have something fun to open in between bills.
Oh.
That's so sweet.
That's love.
That's love.
She had addressed it, but never stamped it or sent it.
It was dated August, 2020 and it read something like this.
Hi, darlin'.
What a month it's been.
I hope you get a good feeling from this card.
I love you today, tomorrow and always.
I absolutely believe this small series of events was not a coincidence.
It was my mom giving my dad a moment of comfort
at such an awful time.
My mom never failed to let us know how much she loved us,
even after she had taken her last breath.
Or here's Alejandro's part.
Thanks for all you do.
Your podcast has brought me comfort and laughs
through many difficult times over the last several years.
Someday I'll send you some of my dad's crazy tales
from his days as a highway patrolman.
Yes, please.
In the meantime, stay sexy and know that you are loved.
Lisa, she, her.
Lisa.
Lisa.
God.
We're having our time already.
We don't need the fucking sweetest hometown we've ever read.
But also to turn around so quickly
after you went through something like that,
to tell us a thing that you got to experience
that was so beautiful.
Like, thank you for that.
That's very generous of you.
Yeah.
And also I 100% believe that your mom was like,
look at that book.
I forgot that I left that card there.
Definitely.
Absolutely.
Or I did, I knew I left that card there.
Yeah.
So good.
You know what that reminds me of, Georgia,
is you gave me and my sister one of the nicest gifts
one year, which was, I think it,
maybe it was the year anniversary,
or maybe it was Christmas after the first year my mom died.
Yeah. It was just a little frame and it was my mom's signature so it's like off
of a card I think or something that said love mom. Yeah. And every time I look at
that it's like when it's your mom's writing, it's your mom because it's that
is there, that's them. Mine would be XOXO, cause they sign it the same way your entire fucking life.
Yes.
And their penmanship and like, it's so personal.
Yeah.
I just so relate to how much that must have meant.
Cause it's like, it's the closest she could have been.
Yeah.
Your sister helped me with that.
You can get it on Etsy.
And I think it's such a great personalized gift for sure.
So lovely.
So lovely.
Yeah. So lovely. Yeah.
So personal.
Yeah.
Well, all right.
I'm done having all these feelings.
This is this is just supposed to be a job.
God damn it.
This is just a job.
This is it.
I want to clock out now.
OK. You know how.
Stay sexy.
And don't get murdered.
We do know how we do.
Goodbye. Goodbye.
Goodbye.
Elvis, do you want a cookie?
This is Kate Winkler-Dawson, host of the True Crime talk show Wicked Words,
where I interview journalists, podcasters, and authors about the fascinating behind-the-scenes
stories from
their investigations into the world of true crime.
These are the stories behind the stories.
Coming up on Wicked Words, I talked to prolific crime writer Patricia Cornwell about her
book Portrait of a Killer, Jack the Ripper, Case Cl closed, where she reexamines the evidence, documents,
and records surrounding this infamous Victorian-era case.
Veteran journalist Raina Peterson tells me her story of a brazen, uncatchable jewel thief
who tiptoed through the homes of Dallas' high society during the swinging 60s.
Her 2024 book, The King of Diamonds, investigates how this thief eluded police
and the FBI for more than a decade.
And I chat with award-winning journalist
and podcast host Mandy Matney,
whose unflinching investigation of the Murdoch murders
sheds light on one of South Carolina's
most powerful and corrupt political figures.
So join me and a new special guest every week for Wicked Words,
where we take a deep dive into the stories behind the stories.
Wicked Words premieres on Monday, July 1st on Exactly Right. With new episodes every Monday,
follow Wicked Words wherever you get your podcasts.
-♪ MUSIC PLAYING Our editor is Aristotle Acevedo. This episode was mixed by Liana Squillacci. Email your hometowns to MyFavoriteMurder at gmail.com.
And follow the show on Instagram and Facebook at MyFavoriteMurder and on Twitter at MyFaveMurder.
Goodbye!