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Talking Dateline: The Night of the Audition

September 17, 2025 /

This episode covers the disappearance of Shannon Medill, her husband Josh Burgess's confession, and the impact on her mother, Lisa. Blaine Alexander and Keith Morrison discuss the case, including the investigation and the emotional journey of those involved.

Shannon Medill, a 25-year-old actress from Calvary, Alberta, went missing after a promising audition in November 2014. Initially, her husband claimed she had gone to pursue an acting job, but inconsistencies in his story led to a chilling confession.

Keith Morrison highlights Shannon's vibrant personality and the unique approach to storytelling in this episode. The narrative begins with her mother boxing, a way for Lisa to channel her grief after losing her daughter.

The investigation faced challenges, including the slow process of obtaining warrants in Alberta. The confession from Josh Burgess was particularly dramatic, occurring through a doorway without recording, complicating the case.

Lisa's journey of healing through boxing is discussed, along with her connection to trainer Jeff Starling, who also experienced loss. Their shared grief helped them find strength and support in each other.

TLDR

Shannon Medill's disappearance leads to her husband's chilling confession and her mother's journey of grief and healing through boxing.

Episode

22:17
00:00:00
Hi guys, I'm Blaine Alexander and this is Talking Dateline. Today's episode is a Keith Morrison story, the night of the audition.
00:00:09
It begins with the disappearance of 25-year-old Shannon Medill, a rising actress in Calvary, Alberta.
00:00:15
Just days after a promising audition in November of 2014, Shannon was gone. At first, her husband said she'd headed 200 miles away for an acting job,
00:00:24
But as police investigated, they uncovered secrets about the marriage, inconsistencies in Josh Burgess's story, and ultimately, his chilling confession.
00:00:34
So if you haven't watched this episode yet, you know what to do. You can find it right below this podcast or stream it anytime on Peacock.
00:00:40
And when you come back, we'll share more of Keith's interview with the trainer who helped Shannon's mother, Lisa, channel grief into strength.
00:00:47
All right, Keith, let's talk Dateline. All right, let's do it. I have to say that just from the very first shot, the very first line, the story drew me in because it began in such a different way from a lot of our other stories.
00:01:00
Right. I mean, usually it's the death or whatever's happened, kind of the mystery right off the bat.
00:01:05
But here we have a woman who's boxing. Yeah. Yeah. Well, you know, my brilliant producing partner, Tim Eulinger, decided that's a good way to start this story because it really was a very important way for a mother to deal with what happened to her daughter.
00:01:22
I was reading about, I'm changing the subject just a little bit for a moment, if that's permissible in this program.
00:01:28
Please do. I think it is, right? Yes, please do. reading about this wonderful children's author named Robert Munch,
00:01:35
who lives in Guelph, Ontario, Canada, with his wife Anne. But there was a phrase he did for a book.
00:01:44
See if I can remember it. It was appropriate, I think, for Shannon's mother. I'll love you forever.
00:01:53
I'll like you for always. As long as I'm living, my baby, you'll be. I think any mother could relate to that probably.
00:02:05
Absolutely. I know that book. I know that line. Yeah. I know it well. It's beautiful.
00:02:11
It's beautiful. And I think that's exactly it. I mean, you know, there are so many different ways to start a Dateline story, to get into a Dateline story.
00:02:18
But to start immediately with the pain of the person left behind, I think was a very striking way to do it.
00:02:25
Because immediately I thought, oh my gosh, what happened? What led her to this place?
00:02:31
Sure. Let's talk about Shannon. 25 years old. What did you come to find out about her?
00:02:37
Well, Shannon was really the heart of this thing as far as I was concerned. It's what really attracted me to this story as much as anything else was her character, the type of person she was.
00:02:48
She was vibrant. She was witty. She was funny. She spent some time doing stand-up comedy.
00:02:55
She was a talented young actress. Because you know some families where there is one person who is, I'm not sure what you'd call them, but the sort of vibrant life spark in the middle of the family.
00:03:08
Unpredictable, difficult, not always successful, but you can't take your eyes off them.
00:03:13
And that was her. You know, I got that sense immediately. I have to say that watching this, obviously, from the standpoint of putting together Dateline stories, you all had a tremendous gift, which was a trove of video of Shannon.
00:03:30
Yes. And that's not something that we often have when we talk about people who have been taken away.
00:03:36
And so to be able to really, I mean, in so many ways, Keith, bring her to life in this story.
00:03:41
Right. Very quickly in that piece, I felt like, okay, I know her. I got a sense of her.
00:03:45
I got a sense of her personality, what she's like. And that's not something that we can often do.
00:03:51
Right. Almost in real time because, you know, the audition she did was just a couple of days before she was reported missing.
00:03:59
And in fact, you know, we've already done the spoiler alerts, I know. But the day she did the audition was the day she died.
00:04:08
That added a bit of a sort of eerie factor to it as well, didn't it? Yeah, very much so.
00:04:15
Her unpredictability was such that when she didn't show up for a family dinner, the expectation was that she had suddenly got an audition somewhere up in Edmonton.
00:04:27
And then later on, they found evidence of a credit card being used in New York City.
00:04:32
Maybe she'd gone there. The idea that she would up and take off and go somewhere was not out of the realm of possibility.
00:04:39
And she was missing, and they had no reason to suspect her husband. they seem to have a very close relationship he seemed to worship her and he also was very happy
00:04:52
to be included in family events and so they didn't have any reason to suspect that he was
00:04:58
responsible even her family seemed i mean i think there was a sound right where she said up until
00:05:06
kind of the day that you know there was a confession she never thought that it would
00:05:10
be him. This great surprise, right? Which in a lot of the stories that we do, it's thinking,
00:05:17
okay, gosh, I hate to think this, but maybe it was her husband. Maybe it was the partner. Maybe
00:05:22
it was somebody. But the fact that they really, in their minds, stuck by him for so long was also
00:05:27
very striking to me Yeah it was striking One of the other interesting things about this he confessed through a doorway to a cop who was standing outside by herself She heard it alone And so she had to get more corroboration before she could actually use it
00:05:42
But then we started to talk about the methodologies of police work in Alberta and much of Canada.
00:05:52
And they are quite a bit different than they are here. I say quite a bit different.
00:05:57
I'm not schooled in this, so I may be going too far, but they are different and it is very complicated and it takes a long time.
00:06:04
So that was part of the reason this took so long to solve, months and months, because just applying for a warrant to look inside the husband's house seemed to take forever.
00:06:15
there had to be sort of more evidence of guilt than i think i'm right when i say this and there
00:06:25
would have been required in uh an investigation in you know new york or la or something i believe
00:06:32
yeah can we talk about this confession and there were two confessions but the first
00:06:37
through the door yeah underwear clad no recording covered in blood confession i mean
00:06:44
There are so many bits of drama to that moment that it was almost kind of hard to sift through it.
00:06:50
But I just can't imagine being the investigator who gets this confession through the door and has no way to prove it.
00:06:59
No recordings, no mic cams, no anything running. That has to be the most frustrating thing.
00:07:03
I can't imagine anything more frustrating in that situation. It was frustrating for us not having video of that.
00:07:09
So you can imagine what it would be like for her. Right. Yeah. I mean, you've done a number of these stories.
00:07:15
There have been confessions all over the place. Have you seen anything quite like that one?
00:07:18
No. No. He was an unusual character. I don't know if you remember a story about a – I'm talking about Canadian stories, but a Canadian colonel who was attacking young women.
00:07:33
At first, he started out by sneaking into their houses and stealing their underwear, and then he graduated to killing them.
00:07:40
And he had been a highly regarded, decorated senior member of the Canadian military.
00:07:45
So it was a terrible scandal. We get to the interrogation when they finally get to the place where they have enough evidence that they can put him into a room and they can ask him the questions about what really happened.
00:07:54
And because he has confessed to nothing, he doesn't even know he's a suspect until that moment he's brought into the room.
00:08:00
He has lots of reason to not think he's a suspect. And that guy who did the interrogation was so incredibly skillful.
00:08:10
He was very polite, very friendly, treated the colonel with great respect. But it's that kind of interrogation, which, again, I think we saw something of that in this conversation that you watched, is pretty successful generally.
00:08:27
Absolutely. Because I wondered watching it and now talking to you, if he had taken the complete opposite approach, come in yelling at him, cursing him, I know you did this, blah, blah, blah.
00:08:37
certainly you wonder what that would have yielded because Josh all along had certainly had everybody fooled.
00:08:44
And so you just wonder of what, certainly different approaches make all the difference.
00:08:49
Well, they worked at him for quite a while before this fellow came in and they weren't getting anywhere.
00:08:55
So they were running out of time. They had to get, they only had him in there for,
00:09:02
I can't remember how many hours, but they had to get whatever they were going to get from him
00:09:06
within that period of time. They weren't there yet, so they wouldn't be able to charge him,
00:09:10
so they'd have to let him go. So with just a few hours left, in walks this fellow who
00:09:16
does the victim-blaming routine, and that worked. It was fascinating to watch. It really was. When we come back, you'll hear from Lisa's trainer,
00:09:29
Jeff Starling, who also lost a family member to a tragic murder, about how he turned workouts into
00:09:35
therapy and how the gym became for him a place of healing. I'm always struck by someone who has knowledge and has close proximity to a family who is
00:09:48
trying to find answers for so long and to be able to be with them as they're suffering
00:09:53
and wondering and not really sure what's going on and still keep that sort of a secret is
00:09:58
just really, really chilling. You could go and be apparently Mr. Nice Guy with the family over Christmas, take them Christmas gifts.
00:10:09
And you know it's full well that their daughter is in a Tupperware container on his porch.
00:10:14
On the porch, yeah. You know, when you spoke with Shannon's family, and I really loved the interview with her mother, how was that for her to find out that bit of information?
00:10:26
On the one hand, there is the answer, right, that you've sought for so long. but the answer is so painful well she's been dealing with that for a long time now for about
00:10:34
a decade and um i think that and she has found some measure of i won't say peace but some way
00:10:43
to deal with it through the boxing that we showed at the beginning on the end of the program
00:10:50
that was hugely important to her to be able to take out the aggression and the the anger
00:10:55
well you talked about Lisa Shannon's mom and just the ways that she has dealt with this which of course
00:11:01
has been tremendously difficult for her boxing we start with those images of her there in that Calgary gym and we actually hear a little bit more from a trainer His name is Jeff Starling who also lost a loved one to a murder
00:11:16
Talk to me about that connection. They both went through this terrible traumatic thing,
00:11:20
so they understood each other. I think had she not gotten the impression that her instructor
00:11:25
knew where she was coming from, it wouldn't have been quite as helpful to her. It was just
00:11:29
you know, it was as a way to release their grief, as a way to get it out. It's been wonderfully
00:11:37
helpful to both of them, I think. Sure. Keith, let's play a little bit of your conversation with Jeff.
00:11:43
So I lost my brother, my younger brother, Laurie, around the same time that Lisa lost Shannon.
00:11:48
And then we met at a support group for families who've been impacted by homicide. It took
00:11:53
a few conversations over a few months to convince Lisa to come and try this out.
00:11:59
She had done exercise and movement and fitness in the past, but this was going to be a very,
00:12:06
a more intense relationship, coach, client. Yeah, but we had the bond of that shared loss,
00:12:14
which gave us an anchor to work off. Lisa and I kind of joke that no matter what's happening in
00:12:21
your day, the bar always weighs 45 pounds. And in a time when there is so much chaos and
00:12:28
unpredictability and people making decisions on you and your family's behalf that impact your life
00:12:33
very intensely, being able to come to a place where everything is very predictable and stable
00:12:39
and non-chaotic was very important, very helpful. That was really powerful. He said several powerful
00:12:44
things in there. One, I really loved the bar always weighs 45 pounds, no matter what's going
00:12:50
on on the outside right and in a world of where everything's going crazy you know in your life as
00:12:56
you're dealing with this tragedy you know that there is at least one source of consistency
00:13:00
yeah it's true which i think people really need one of the most fascinating things to me keith
00:13:09
about being in this role is talking to sometimes after the cameras stop rolling and talking to
00:13:14
families and just kind of hearing how they've channeled their grief what it looks like to try
00:13:19
and heal, what it looks like to try and find some new semblance of life after an event like this.
00:13:24
And some people who take it and say, I want to help other families find justice.
00:13:29
I want to start a foundation in my loved one's name and do a lot of good that way.
00:13:35
Or certainly something like this when it comes to boxing or channeling that grief into something
00:13:39
with someone who can understand them as well. The first time I encountered this was years and years ago when good friends of my wife and I, we lived in a different part of Los Angeles, but they went on a summer trip.
00:13:55
They were riding along the highway on their bicycles, and their 13-year-old daughter wanted to ride on ahead.
00:14:03
Maybe she was 11, a young daughter. And so they wanted to give her a little more freedom.
00:14:08
One of the parents was a little more protective. The one who wanted to give her more freedom said, let her go on ahead.
00:14:13
Let her go ahead. Have her private time. So they did. And she rode on ahead, a quarter of a mile or so, went around a bend, hit by a car, killed instantly.
00:14:27
Oh, God. So we went with that mother and father through the process of when they brought the girl home, when they went to the...
00:14:38
The funeral home with them were there the day that she was able to say goodbye to her daughter's body in the casket.
00:14:47
And saw that kind of raw grief that I'll never forget for as long as I live. But the reason I'm telling you is because she put this grief of hers to work also.
00:15:02
She formed an organization that her daughter had loved dancing. You know, that age, so many girls do.
00:15:10
So she opened a school for little girls to learn dance in the inner city. And it's now been like, I don't know, a quarter of a century or so that it's been going great guns.
00:15:22
And it's what the thing has saved your life. And in a similar way, as you pointed out, you've got that 40 pound weight you're going to have to deal with.
00:15:32
Or if you've got some specific thing that you're going to do that is going to channel this into something positive.
00:15:38
And that's what a parent can do. I mean, I wonder if that is one of the things that will kind of go forward, the power of taking your grief and being able to put it somewhere or find some sort of way to move through it.
00:15:54
Yeah, yeah, probably. But, you know, you lose somebody in a family, it does change your perspective on things a lot.
00:16:04
and I think that's why that little bit of doggerel struck me so much that little line
00:16:14
I'll love you forever I'll like you for always as long as I'm living my baby you'll be
00:16:21
and that's what her mother feels I can tell you for sure as long as she's living
00:16:27
Shannon will be your baby well it was a beautiful interview and a very powerful story
00:16:33
certainly in learning about Shannon but just in the many ways that this person was ultimately brought to justice coming up we will answer some of your questions from social media Well as you can imagine Keith we have a lot of social media comments questions
00:16:52
thoughts. Oh, yes. All right. Sure. So let's go to some of those. Okay. Southern Beach Girl,
00:16:58
I love that name. Southern Beach Girl says, don't be flaky about meetups with family or friends,
00:17:04
or they'll never know you're missing. Well, that's a good bit of advice, I think, I guess.
00:17:09
Interesting take. Stay in touch. Yeah. Stay in touch. On behalf of currents everywhere, stay in touch.
00:17:17
There you go. But no, certainly we've seen a lot of stories where people, it's been a family gathering.
00:17:22
I've actually done a story like that where it was a Thanksgiving gathering and, you know, their daughter didn't show up and they said,
00:17:28
hmm, what's going on there? And that's how they ultimately found out that she was in trouble.
00:17:33
We have a few audio questions as well. Let's play one from Debbie. Hi, my name is Debbie.
00:17:38
I'm from Millington, Tennessee. Really wish I could join y'all in Nashville. That would be awesome.
00:17:46
But anyway, my question is for Keith. And I just wonder, over the years, is there one case that has just stuck with you that
00:17:55
she just still eats at you? That's my question. Thanks, Joyce. Well, it's a good question.
00:18:04
And I have to tell you, people have asked that before. And there are so many of them that I can't land on any one in particular.
00:18:15
But I keep thinking of other stories and bringing up moments in them that live with me.
00:18:20
And, yeah. You know, one of the things about this is not just a question of is there a murder?
00:18:27
Will they solve the murder? But what a few decades of doing this kind of work will do is give you an experience of the way human beings tick that you would never get in any other kind of reporting.
00:18:42
You can report on politics, as I have done in the past, until you're blue in the face.
00:18:47
But it's not really going to tell you the nature of human beings like this kind of reporting will do.
00:18:51
what we are capable of, good and bad, what families are like, how everybody lies about things,
00:19:02
how secrets are kept, how just it's endless. Just the way human beings behave is the fascinating takeaway from this kind of reporting.
00:19:14
Yeah. We have a question, another audio question. This is from Becky. Let's listen.
00:19:21
Hello, this is Becky from Shadeport, Illinois. My question is, how is it determined which journalist does which story?
00:19:29
By the way, I think Keith Morrison is the best storyteller. Thank you. We agree, Becky.
00:19:37
We agree. Blaine is a better storyteller. Oh, no. We arm wrestle. Isn't that what we do?
00:19:45
No. We're going to be doing some arm wrestling in Nashville. We get together in a room.
00:19:50
They throw out a title on the table, and we are Russell over it. And Keith is clearly the strongest among us, and Josh.
00:19:56
They're very strong. Oh, great. No. It comes down to a number of different factors.
00:20:03
But, you know, I mean, a lot of us, sometimes we bring stories to the table, right?
00:20:07
There will be stories that we're particularly interested in that, you know, you've been following or that you have a passion for wanting to tell.
00:20:14
Sure. it's a little different than uh than a lot of the reporting that you imagine a newspaper reporter
00:20:20
or tv reporter doing it's a a whole group of people who will consider all the facts of a
00:20:25
of a story that you can ascertain at least um and have a meeting about it and go over it and
00:20:31
will it fit into the you know is this the kind of story we can adequately do and then if we can
00:20:36
adequately do it who's who should produce it who should be the person who's the correspondent who
00:20:41
You know, there's an awful lot of thought that goes into these decisions. And, you know, we're fortunate to have some people who are pretty good at that kind of decision making.
00:20:53
A whole army of a team that is fantastic at this. Yes. Well, no, these were great questions.
00:21:00
And somebody mentioned Nashville. We'll do some arm wrestling in Nashville, won't we?
00:21:04
You bet. You bet. I'm looking forward to it. Well, Keith, it's always such a pleasure to talk Dateline with you, my friend.
00:21:11
Thanks so much for joining me today. Thank you. It's been a delight as always. As always.
00:21:17
All right. That's it for talking Dateline this week. Thank you so much for listening.
00:21:21
If you have a case that you want us to cover or a question for our team, you can reach out to us anytime on social at Dateline NBC.
00:21:29
You can also leave us a voicemail at 212-413-5252 or send us a voice memo in a DM.
00:21:36
Keith, you check those voice memos, don't you, personally? Oh, yeah. I'd spend most of my day doing that.
00:21:43
Exactly it. And one more thing. We are just one week away from Dateline Live in Nashville.
00:21:49
That's taking place Sunday, September 28th. You still have a little bit of time to get your tickets, but they are going fast.
00:21:55
Head to datelinenbc.com slash event. That's datelinenbc.com slash event to grab your tickets now.
00:22:03
We'll make sure to see you there, of course. And we will always see you every Friday night on Dateline NBC.
00:22:11
Thank you.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 90
    Most heartbreaking
  • 85
    Most shocking
  • 85
    Biggest twist
  • 80
    Most dramatic

Episode Highlights

  • The Disappearance of Shannon Medill
    Shannon Medill, a rising actress, vanished just days after a promising audition.
    “Just days after a promising audition in November of 2014, Shannon was gone.”
    @ 00m 15s
    September 17, 2025
  • Chilling Confession
    Investigators uncover shocking truths about Shannon's husband, leading to his confession.
    “But as police investigated, they uncovered secrets about the marriage.”
    @ 00m 24s
    September 17, 2025
  • Boxing as Therapy
    Shannon's mother channels her grief into boxing, finding strength and healing.
    “That was hugely important to her to be able to take out the aggression and the anger.”
    @ 10m 34s
    September 17, 2025

Episode Quotes

  • I'll love you forever. I'll like you for always.
    Talking Dateline: The Night of the Audition
  • What led her to this place?
    Talking Dateline: The Night of the Audition

Key Moments

  • Shannon's Disappearance00:09
  • Chilling Confession00:24
  • Boxing Therapy10:50
  • Power of Grief13:09
  • Justice Served16:33

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown