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Talking Dateline: The Professor & The Poet

March 11, 2026 /

This episode of Talking Dateline covers the case of Sue Markham and Jorge Landeros, featuring discussions on relationships, crime, and personal experiences. Keith Morrison and Josh Mankiewicz discuss the dynamics of Sue's relationship with Jorge, a Spanish teacher and yoga instructor, and how her blind spot for him led to tragic consequences. They reflect on the neighborhood in Montgomery County, Maryland, where the murder occurred, and Josh shares his personal connection to the area.

Josh describes Jorge as a charming but ultimately dangerous individual, highlighting how Sue's friends were unaware of the severity of the situation. They discuss the investigation that led to Jorge's arrest and the unusual circumstances surrounding his poetry written while on the run.

The episode includes insights from Rocio, Jorge's ex-girlfriend, who shares her experiences with him and the warning signs she ignored. Rachel White, a Dateline producer, joins later to answer social media questions about the case, providing additional context and details.

Throughout the conversation, Keith and Josh emphasize the importance of recognizing red flags in relationships and the impact of isolation on victims. They conclude with reflections on their experiences in journalism and the connections made with viewers.

TLDR

Sue Markham's tragic relationship with Jorge Landeros leads to murder; insights from producers and ex-girlfriend Rocio highlight warning signs and investigation details.

Episode

27:27
00:00:00
Hi, everybody. I'm Keith Morrison, and we are Talking Dateline. Today, I'm here with
00:00:09
a reprobate named Josh Mankiewicz to discuss his latest episode, The Professor and the
00:00:15
Poet. Interesting title, Josh. Did you pick that one out? Let me put it this way. No.
00:00:21
Yeah. No. If you have not seen it, you can watch the episode on Peacock or listen to
00:00:28
it in the Dateline podcast feed and then come right back here for our talk. And later we'll
00:00:33
have an extra clip from Josh's interview with the killer's ex-girlfriend. Then I'll be joined by
00:00:38
Dateline producer Rachel White to answer social media questions about the episode.
00:00:44
Are you ready, Josh? Let's do this. I have never been more ready. All right. There's literally nothing you can do right now that will upset me.
00:00:52
Okay, fine. So this was an interesting story. Josh, what particular part of it drew you to doing this? Well, you know, this is a story that has one thing in common with a lot of
00:01:05
stories we do, which is that it involves a person who was the victim in this case, Sue Markham.
00:01:12
She was smart. She was accomplished. She was together. She was no pushover, but she had a blind spot. She had a blind spot for this guy, Jorge Landero, who she originally
00:01:23
met as a Spanish teacher. She wanted to learn Spanish. Then he got her into yoga. And then she
00:01:29
just saw him as like the guy that she wanted, the idea of the guy that she wanted. Certainly
00:01:37
at some point they were involved, although that appears to be brief. She told other people,
00:01:43
family members later, that she recognized that the relationship was all one way, that he was
00:01:48
never going to return her affection. But many people would stop at that point, realizing that
00:01:54
the interest that they have in someone else is not going to be returned. She could not stop.
00:02:00
And the result was that she put herself in this terrible position with this guy.
00:02:07
We run into those characters a lot in this line of work, and they are on the surface charming.
00:02:12
They're able to somehow attract women, maybe, as you say, bright, smart women who are nevertheless, they know how to fill a gap in a person's life.
00:02:26
Was she someone who had not had a long-term boyfriend or husband or had had difficulty finding a romantic relationship?
00:02:34
I'm going to say yes. I mean, I think she had never been married. it doesn't seem like there was any great love in her life that had come and gone.
00:02:44
I think maybe she thought this guy was that. What she didn't see was that this is not the guy for you.
00:02:51
And many people told her that. And she did also a thing that we're going to recognize, which is she stopped talking
00:02:59
to her friends about it because she knew what the reaction was going to be. And so the result was there was no one around to say, wait, what are you doing?
00:03:06
I think all her friends today have regrets that one, she didn't tell them about it.
00:03:13
And two, they sort of weren't more forceful, but like, you know, nobody wants to argue with a friend.
00:03:20
I mean, I mean, if you're doing something wrong, I might tell you once, I'm not going to like keep bringing it up.
00:03:27
If you've made it clear, you don't want to talk about it. Sure. And she's a university professor for God's sake.
00:03:32
I don't think anybody thought, you know, this guy's violent. This guy's physically dangerous.
00:03:37
You need to get away from it. Don't ever be alone with him. I don't think anybody ever said that to her or thought they needed to.
00:03:43
Well, they don't advertise themselves. You know, somebody who is smooth and old genius and apparently very charming, but has a violent undertow.
00:03:51
They're not going to say, hey, by the way, I can be a violent guy. Watch it. You know, the prosecution theory of the case was that he came over.
00:03:59
We're not clear. why is he trying to get more money out of her she probably didn't have any money is he trying to
00:04:04
calm her down we don't know we don't know but they have a drink together and then something happens
00:04:09
and there's a fight and then he realizes this is the state's theory that he can't go back and
00:04:17
they start physically battling and he's much bigger and stronger than she is did he go over
00:04:22
there to kill her uh not clear not clear however after the fact that the whole business of moving
00:04:28
the car and putting it into place where some idiot might steal it. Of course, some idiot did.
00:04:33
Yeah, well, I mean. Indicates he's trying to cover up the crime, at least. Oh, no, this was a very smart guy.
00:04:38
This was a very smart guy. And I mean, look, you know, in a lot of jurisdictions in the world, a guy with a criminal record
00:04:46
who's caught driving the dead woman's car and runs from police, like, that's your suspect
00:04:51
and everybody can go early on the day. Yeah. Yeah. But to their credit, I think Montgomery County police thought, this guy's kind of hapless, and he's a thief, and he's kind of a dope maybe.
00:05:06
But this doesn't feel like the killer. But it's an avenue in investigative work that you have to go down because you're going to get asked about.
00:05:13
I mean, there were a lot of burglaries in that neighborhood. We should talk about the neighborhood, too, because I know that place very intimately.
00:05:20
Well, yeah. The neighborhood went downhill after you lived there, right? Well, and why do we think it went downhill is the question, right?
00:05:28
But, you know, I mean, the cool people stopped coming when I moved out. Let me just say that.
00:05:34
That's not true. So before we pick up the case again, tell me about this neighborhood where it happened.
00:05:42
This is a suburban Montgomery County, Maryland, outside Washington, D.C. And, you know, until I actually showed up at the crime scene, which was our first shoot on the first day of shooting for this Dateline story,
00:05:54
It was only then because Montgomery County is a big place it was only when I showed up at the actual scene of the crime that I realized that it was the neighborhood that I had grown up in
00:06:05
My parents and I moved there in 1964. And we lived in three different houses, probably within five miles of where this murder happened.
00:06:16
And I've probably driven by that house or been driven by that house as a kid, like maybe like a thousand times.
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I mean, I had friends who lived in really within walking distance of there. I, her fire station was our fire station.
00:06:32
Her public library was our public library. I mean, I, I've ridden my bike past there, uh, all, you know, many, many, many, many years ago.
00:06:39
But to get back there to recognize where you are, it must've been quite a moment.
00:06:43
It was, you know, and also, you know, that part of, uh, montgomery county you know it hasn't changed that much it was just me and my parents back then
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my brother hadn't been born yet i mean or as my dad referred to it the good old days but it was
00:06:57
an interesting place to live and then later later now that we're talking about that i became a
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reporter at the local abc station wgla channel 7 and so then i also like covered montgomery county
00:07:10
uh which is where i met the guy who's now the the state's attorney but at the time was a line
00:07:15
prosecutor john mccarthy and um it was great to be a reporter in the same area that i'd grown up in
00:07:24
because i knew my way around sure you know this is beginning to resemble an old-fashioned british
00:07:29
detective story because you know it's a reporter drawn back to his home community and why there's
00:07:36
a murder he should cover and how interesting the murder is and he follows it around from place to
00:07:42
place in his old neighborhood having feelings of connection right and then what happens well yeah
00:07:49
and then but then he gets together with the girl he left behind doesn't that happen because that
00:07:53
didn't happen on this one that's that's not a british murder mystery that's you're you're getting
00:07:57
all american on me now yeah that did not happen hang on a minute josh we're going to take this
00:08:02
little break i want to talk about this in a minute but can we um can we take a break here
00:08:07
and then we'll come right back and discuss the rest yeah okay sure right back Well, talk about the perp here a little bit more.
00:08:25
So Jorge was a poet, a published poet, apparently, which I find surprising. But, you know, people have many talents.
00:08:33
Is his poetry any good? Have you read it? We did. We read it. Really? Yeah. How is it?
00:08:40
Not world class, huh? Okay. maybe it's the translation that's the issue a lot very uh very purple prosy let me just say
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um but what's incredibly unusual is that he wrote poems or someone with his exact name wrote these
00:08:59
poems and published them while he was on the run and the poems are about being pursued by the fbi
00:09:03
um i don't think he ever realized that anybody would who was chasing him would see them i think
00:09:11
he was doing this for his own sort of you know or was he being a bit of a daredevil you never know
00:09:18
well you know he was kind of taunting police in the conversations he had with them like at one
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point they they posed as a faculty member from american university he was doing a story about sue
00:09:28
and they said you know can we come to mexico and interview you and uh and he was like uh yeah come
00:09:34
on and bring your Kevlar, meaning your bulletproof vest, right? So, you know, clear that, you know, I don't know if that was a direct threat, but it's
00:09:44
certainly an admission that he knew that that person was not a reporter. So did he know that the FBI was going to see his poetry talking about them?
00:09:53
I don't know. But you don't often see fugitives from the FBI write poems about being pursued by the
00:10:01
FBI. I don't think Capone penned any verses. It just makes your bad guy a more interesting character.
00:10:09
That's for sure. It does. That it does. Wouldn't you love to have been at the place where they finally arrested him?
00:10:14
Outside his door. Oh, yeah. Yeah, right. It was just on the street outside his house.
00:10:18
He's walking down the street to get a soda, I think. Yeah. And they stop him. Those are always the times.
00:10:23
The cop told me once, the thing that gets to him the most about his job is he knows when
00:10:29
he's going to arrest somebody, you know, even if there's a long route through the court system,
00:10:34
that when he takes that person out of their home, puts them in the back of a car to take
00:10:39
him in for questioning, that person is never going back to that place again. Right.
00:10:44
And they'll try to rearrange things so that, you know, the dishes are done or something
00:10:48
or the piece of paper that they need to look at when they return will be there. And the guy is letting them do these things, knowing you're never coming back here.
00:10:58
you're not coming back we got you never see this life again it's a dramatic moment
00:11:03
one interesting thing that i think didn't make the story uh the tv story is um you've seen this cops place a lot of importance on what suspects do when they're in custody
00:11:19
and they're alone right yes because innocent people are climbing the walls right like i can't
00:11:26
believe i'm here in this interrogation room get me out of here i want a lawyer i didn't have anything
00:11:31
to do with this let me explain everything to you right um guilty people uh the thinking goes can
00:11:38
doze off they get their feet up they're like because they know they got a long stretch ahead
00:11:44
of them well on the plane back home this is a guy who's been plucked out of mexico identified by dna
00:11:51
and is now in leg irons and cuffs and knows that he looking at a considerable amount of time like that he falls asleep on the plane going home And they found that interesting I think
00:12:06
Yeah. What about this? I'm a little confused about Rocio. Is that her name? Rocio, the new girlfriend?
00:12:14
That is her name. Was that in Mexico? Yes. Rocio was a woman that he met in Mexico.
00:12:20
I think he met her through yoga. And then they became friends. And then they became more than friends.
00:12:24
And then he and his dogs moved in with Rocio and her kids. And, you know, Rocio, it tells a different story than I think Sue Markham would have told in some ways, which is she says, you know, he was very sweet to me and he was very interested in me.
00:12:38
And then things change. Yeah. You know, we're living together. He cheated on me.
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She says during sex, he would choke her in a way that she found particularly alarming.
00:12:51
Right. Um, he would separate her from her friends. He was sort of more, more typical controlling violent behavior.
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He was verbally abusive. Now this guy is a guy that that personality is a guy that you and I have covered like
00:13:04
dozens of times. That person is like a lot of the guys that get arrested on daylight and they're not writing
00:13:09
any poetry. Finally, she sort of summoned up her courage and knew that she needed to get away from
00:13:16
this guy. She threw him out of her house and she got an order of protection against him.
00:13:20
and they were done and then later after she heard he'd been arrested she's not the person who called
00:13:26
the fbi from everything we know she did not realize that he was a fugitive only that he was
00:13:31
a bad guy um then she called investigators and gave her story we had this extra clip of sound
00:13:37
from your interview with rocio when she's talking about her struggles with her relationship with
00:13:42
jorge and how she ended up sharing her story so shall we have a listen yes what made you call
00:13:49
police in Maryland? Since it was so similar what happened, I thought that this person was
00:14:01
having a serial conduct. And maybe my experience could help to prove that. That took a lot of courage
00:14:14
to call the police in Maryland. You didn't have to do that. Well, I think I didn't have any other choice.
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I feel like that's the only path for me. I understand when people have told me that I'm brave,
00:14:36
but I just think that's... I don't know how to explain it. There's no other way I can go.
00:14:47
the interesting thing about her story i think is that you know there's the question that well you
00:14:52
know was she going to be his next victim whether anything worse was going to happen that we're not
00:14:56
going to know um there wasn't any insurance policy but it was certainly heading in a bad direction
00:15:01
but yeah i mean i don't think there's any question that she took steps to protect herself and her
00:15:05
family and uh that that was the right thing to do i think the message here pretty clearly is
00:15:10
when somebody is trying to isolate you and keep you from talking to people who are going to tell
00:15:15
you that the guy you're with is the wrong guy. That is a giant red flag. And you should not do that.
00:15:21
Absolutely. Talk to your friends. They will. The advice of your friends is worth something.
00:15:26
It's the biggest red flag of all. Oh, yeah. No, no. That's a very, very bad sign.
00:15:31
I agree. Yeah. It's time to say goodbye now, Josh. You think it's time to say goodbye.
00:15:36
But actually, I happen to know that you have been a very active guy recently. You just left.
00:15:45
No, no, no. Yes, you just left the confines of your comfortable home here in Southern California, and you did a jailhouse interview, didn't you, for an upcoming story?
00:15:56
Yes, I did. Right? I just want to say, I love that you are out there and you are still chasing the bad guys.
00:16:04
Stop it now. Come on. Here, I came away from this, and perhaps I'm naive, Josh. I allow that possibility every day that frequently I am.
00:16:15
But I went and I conducted a jailhouse interview with somebody who had been convicted of murder, who will spend the rest of his days in prison.
00:16:26
And I left there thinking he might not belong there. Oh, I mean, I've heard lots of people offer their their claims and their opinions and their I'm innocence.
00:16:37
And over the years, lots of them. And you kind of know when they're most of them are lying.
00:16:43
Most of them are bogus. Yeah, sure. This one is interesting. I love that you're out there.
00:16:49
There may be snow on the roof, but there's still fire in the furnace. That's this guy right here, baby.
00:16:55
Yeah. Every once in a while, I take a walk outside, too. You know, take my dog for a walk, that kind of thing.
00:17:04
Keith Morrison, folks, coming soon to your local airport. Sure. Right. You know, another little interesting thing that happened to me yesterday when I was on that trip.
00:17:13
you know occasionally people as you know will come and say hello and oh yes and there was a
00:17:18
a group of people uh i think they were fbi actually from who stopped and we had a picture
00:17:24
taken but a mother daughter came to speak to me and and uh they were lovely lovely people and
00:17:31
they were traveling to sacramento to see uh state legislators right to ask for their support for a
00:17:39
campaign to fund a program to help poor children get hearing aids, poor children who are unable to
00:17:45
afford, you know, they just go through life without being able to hear well. I thought, well, that's
00:17:50
nice It a nice thing to do And they said hello on the way up And then on the way back from Sacramento well who should I see on the airplane but them I thought well that an interesting little coincidence The life we live on the road as you know Josh can be very interesting and produce
00:18:07
meetings that you never expect to happen. I agree. It's where you meet the audience face-to-face.
00:18:14
And my contact with the audience, almost, I would say, 100% positive. It's great.
00:18:20
I always feel better after talking with people who watch or listen. Yeah. And when I meet them, they all ask me the same thing.
00:18:27
And what they ask me is, what's Keith really like? Uh-huh. And you tell him he is a prince of a man who once in a while goes outside his office and occasionally even gets on an airplane, but not very often.
00:18:40
That's pretty much it, yeah. Yeah. All right. So a delight to speak to you, Mr. Bankowitz, as always.
00:18:49
Thank you. Great to see you. And we'll be back with Rachel White soon. Rachel White, a far more interesting person to talk to after this.
00:18:59
She produced this story and she did a great job. Yeah. Hi, everybody. I'm back with Dateline producer Rachel White, who worked on this episode.
00:19:18
And we're going to answer some of your questions from social media, which came after the program aired.
00:19:23
Thank you for having me. Yeah. Josh is in some far off place, I'm assuming, pretending to work.
00:19:29
Maybe he's on to the next. That's the charitable way of looking at it. I'm sure it's true, actually.
00:19:36
So let's ask the questions. Eric Purser on Twitter asks, Eric T. Purser, why didn't her friends tell the police about the poet to begin with?
00:19:46
Well, Rachel? It's a good question. I think that by the point where Sue was murdered, it's 2010, and her friends believed that Jorge Landeros, the poet, had moved to Mexico back in 2008.
00:20:01
So from their perspective, the relationship was long over, and they learned that they were still in pretty frequent contact after she passed away.
00:20:11
Right. I guess Jackie, 16, 1941, 232, all those numbers, asks or responded actually to the picture of the Dateline team in Mexico.
00:20:24
I'm going to put it on the screen for anybody watching the video version of the podcast.
00:20:28
It's a lovely picture, by the way. And Rachel, you are in it from the, what, you're the second from the right in the picture?
00:20:35
Yep, that's me in the blue scarf. There you are. It's great. Must have been a fun trip.
00:20:40
And the viewer asks, was this in Juarez? So that was in Mexico City. That's where we were on that day shooting some B-roll, as we call it, of, you know, Mexico scenics.
00:20:54
And that's in a very famous park in Mexico City. It's beautiful. Yeah. May I just offer a little compliment to Mexico City?
00:21:03
I think it's, my God, it's a wonderful city. The architecture, the sort of feel of the place, the grandeur.
00:21:12
Mexico City is underrated, I think, by a lot of Americans. Lisa Scott on Facebook says,
00:21:19
This is the second high-profile murder by yoga instructors. I thought yoga was supposed to relax you and give you inner peace.
00:21:28
The other yoga instructor was the woman whose name was Caitlin, who killed Mo Wilson.
00:21:33
And I remember that one very well because that was my story. The cyclist, of course.
00:21:40
It's really just a comment. Lisa says, I'll stick to aqua aerobics. Thank you. But, you know, there's no reason why somebody in aqua aerobics couldn't get a little jiggy as well.
00:21:51
You know, maybe you heard this on your story, too, with the yoga instructor. But a few people made comments to us like, you know, you're in a place that is supposed to be Zen and you're supposed to be mindful and relaxed.
00:22:04
And there was something about the yoga instructor that you just kind of inherently trust.
00:22:09
They seem very grounded, very centered. So we did get that comment a few times. So I'm curious about something.
00:22:16
I wonder if yoga instructors are sometimes like, you know, other priest-like occupations, which tend to attract people who have ulterior motives.
00:22:29
In other words, somebody becomes a Zen, loving, special kind of person, yoga instructor, precisely because he is kind of on the hunt.
00:22:39
Do you think that applies here? It could be. I mean, you know, we were told by people in this story that Jorge Landeros said that, you know, he studied yoga in India and it made him want to divest himself of his earthly possessions and live in a cave.
00:22:58
Like that was his mindset upon, you know, going there. And, you know, from Sue's friend's perspective, they felt like, sure, he was kind of giving up his earthly possessions, his worldly possessions, but then she was kind of supplementing his lack of income.
00:23:12
So he removed that burden from himself, but essentially found someone else to put it on.
00:23:18
Yeah. What a handy dandy way to live that sort of lifestyle, right? Millie Yantis on Facebook asks this question.
00:23:27
Did he receive the life insurance payout? He did not. His attorneys tell us that he didn't even attempt to collect the life insurance payout.
00:23:36
At Peace Messenger One on Twitter says, Sue must have been amazing because there is nothing in this wide world that could make me love accounting.
00:23:45
I think I probably have to agree with you, Peace Messenger One. I agree. I certainly agree.
00:23:51
I mean, we heard time and time again people telling us how she made studying accounting fun.
00:23:55
And as you learn watching our story, She, you know, took an accounting job for the Ringling Brothers Circus, and her brother told us a story about how she would, you know, explain, you know, certain things about working at the circus and how she had to, you know, figure out the depreciation of elephants, for example.
00:24:14
So she definitely tried to make it interesting. And I think she took those things that she learned at the Ringling Brothers into the classroom, so I could see how that would be a fun way to learn accounting.
00:24:26
And finally, Raven Red, I should say. Raven Red on Facebook says, I would have enjoyed having Sue as a friend, which is probably an appropriate way to begin this ending.
00:24:38
I think that a lot of people that we talked to certainly felt that way. I mean, part of producing a show at Dateline is gathering photos from family and friends.
00:24:48
And, you know, sometimes you get a lot. Sometimes you don't get very many, just depending on a million different reasons.
00:24:56
In this case, we got hundreds of photos of Sue and they were colorful outfits and exotic trips and huge groups of friends that she was hosting.
00:25:08
Always a huge smile on her face. She just really seemed like a lovely person, somebody that you would want to hang out with and be around for sure.
00:25:18
Well, Rachel, thank you so much for answering these questions for us. And clearly you were deeply involved in getting that story on television.
00:25:24
Good job. It was good. Thank you very much. Before we go, I have a question for you, Keith, from one of our viewers.
00:25:33
This is coming from a Dateline viewer named Riley in Montana We going to play the audio of the question now Hi Dateline team My name is Riley and I calling in from Montana I just wanted to say I a huge fan of the show and the podcast Of course Keith
00:25:51
Morrison specifically, I'd probably listen to him reading the phone book. My question is for Keith
00:25:56
in his promo for the show, Something About Carrie. He says the word macabre and he says it like
00:26:04
macabre. And I was just wondering, have I been pronouncing this word wrong my entire life,
00:26:09
or is this just a Keith Morrison spin on the word? Either way, I'd love to hear the debate
00:26:14
on Talking Dateline and wanted to thank you all for a great show. Well, thank you for that. And yeah, I probably just say all words rather foolishly or
00:26:23
differently. Maybe blame my Canadian heritage. Macabre, putting the at the end, is something I grew up with.
00:26:33
So my mother was always a stickler about pronouncing all syllables of words that needed to be pronounced,
00:26:41
only I would frequently get them wrong and still do. Thank you, Rachel, and we'll see you on the next story maybe with any luck.
00:26:49
Yes, see you later, Keith. Thanks. Thanks. That's it for Talking Dateline this week.
00:26:54
And remember, if you have any questions for us about our stories or about Dateline,
00:26:59
you can reach us 24-7 on social media at Dateline NBC. DM us your audio or video on our socials at Dateline NBC
00:27:09
or leave us a voicemail at 212-413-5252 for a chance to be featured. And thank you for listening.

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Episode Highlights

  • The Professor and the Poet
    A discussion about the episode involving Sue Markham and Jorge Landero.
    “This was an interesting story.”
    @ 00m 52s
    March 11, 2026
  • Rocio's Courage
    Rocio shares her experience with Jorge and her decision to call the police.
    “That took a lot of courage to call the police in Maryland.”
    @ 14m 14s
    March 11, 2026
  • Unexpected Connections
    Keith shares a coincidental encounter with a mother-daughter duo on a flight.
    “Meetings that you never expect to happen.”
    @ 18m 10s
    March 11, 2026
  • Life Insurance Mystery
    Jorge Landeros did not attempt to collect the life insurance payout after his passing.
    “He did not.”
    @ 23m 30s
    March 11, 2026
  • Sue's Unique Accounting Style
    Sue made studying accounting fun, even taking a job with the Ringling Brothers Circus.
    “She definitely tried to make it interesting.”
    @ 24m 18s
    March 11, 2026

Episode Quotes

  • This is not the guy for you.
    Talking Dateline: The Professor & The Poet
  • That is a giant red flag.
    Talking Dateline: The Professor & The Poet
  • What a handy dandy way to live that sort of lifestyle, right?
    Talking Dateline: The Professor & The Poet
  • I would have enjoyed having Sue as a friend.
    Talking Dateline: The Professor & The Poet

Key Moments

  • Blind Spot01:17
  • Dangerous Charm03:45
  • Neighborhood Connection06:05
  • Courage to Act13:16
  • Unexpected Encounters18:10
  • Life Choices22:41
  • Sue's Impact23:51
  • Closing Remarks26:52

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown