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MFM Minisode 181

June 29, 2020 /

This episode of My Favorite Murder covers various true crime stories, including the murder of April Kaufman, a local radio host, and the chilling tale of Priscilla Lewis, a pizza parlor worker who was murdered in a small town. The hosts, Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark, share listener-submitted stories that highlight bizarre and tragic events.

April Kaufman's case involves her husband as a suspect, but insufficient evidence left the case cold for years. The narrative reveals that her husband was later implicated in a drug ring and the murder, leading to a shocking conclusion.

Priscilla Lewis was attacked and killed while working at a pizza place in Crockett, California. The story emphasizes the fear and mystery surrounding unsolved murders in small towns, leaving a lasting impact on the community.

Another listener shares a story about two sisters in Egypt who ran brothels and were ultimately convicted of murder, highlighting the sensationalism surrounding women's crimes in the 1920s.

Throughout the episode, the hosts maintain a light-hearted tone while discussing these dark topics, making for an engaging and entertaining listen.

TLDR

This episode features true crime stories about April Kaufman and Priscilla Lewis, along with listener tales of bizarre murders.

Episode

24:00
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00:01:53
Hello. Welcome to my favorite murder. The mini-sode. Short, sweet, filled with horror.
00:02:13
Just the way you like it. Just the way, real quick, like on a Monday. You love Monday. What's your pandemic Monday look like?
00:02:23
staying in better be better be and if not wearing a mask wearing a mask everywhere not political
00:02:32
it's not up to you dad sorry you go first no no after you no please i insist okay the subject
00:02:44
line of this is drugs murder pagans my mom's endocrinologist whoa hello ladies and steven
00:02:50
Allow me to start with the traditional thank you so much for making this podcast.
00:02:54
You guys have kept me company through finishing pharmacy school and moving to Connecticut to start my residency.
00:03:00
Yada, yada. Let's get to it. I was raised in a town called Egg Harbor Township, New Jersey, not known for anything as far as I know.
00:03:09
In 2012, April Kaufman, local radio host and veteran affairs advocate, was found shot dead in her home.
00:03:16
Her husband was suspected, but there was insufficient evidence to pin on anyone, and the case went cold.
00:03:24
was an endocrinologist parentheses my mom's actually who operated out of eht uh egg harbor
00:03:33
township and also worked as a veterans advocate since he was an armed forces veteran himself
00:03:39
he filed a lawsuit to obtain a payout from april's life insurance but they refused to pay him until
00:03:45
they received verification that he was not involved with the murder april's daughter publicly claimed
00:03:50
that he was responsible for the death and filed a suit to prevent him from claiming the life insurance.
00:03:55
Wow. Fast forward to June 2017 when police go to endocrinology office with a search warrant
00:04:02
due to, quote, suspected criminal activity unrelated to the murder case. This is where shit gets crazy.
00:04:08
Is he growing weed or something? Yes. He's growing blood. Isn't that what endocrinologists
00:04:15
are about? I was going to ask, but then I thought that sounds stupid. No, hematologists are blood.
00:04:21
Endocrinology is like hormones and thyroid. It's pretty gallbladder specific, I would say.
00:04:28
I go to one and yet I don't fucking know. What part of you is it for? She's giving me pills.
00:04:35
That's all I know. Pill doctor. So when the police arrived, pulls a nine millimeter handgun, points it at himself and claims he's going to kill himself.
00:04:45
He's caught on a police body cam saying, quote, I'm not going to jail for this. After a brief standoff, no one got hurt.
00:04:53
He's arrested and they search his office. First, they find that he never served in the military and had lied to everyone, including his wife, about being a veteran.
00:05:03
Holy shit. How? Then they find evidence that he had been supplying narcotics to a drug ring run by a pagan motorcycle gang since 2011.
00:05:12
What? A motorcycle gang that worships the earth? Mother Gaia? Here in Egg Township?
00:05:23
Oh, they're all about Easter. Okay. Back in 2012, he was having marital issues and his wife wanted a divorce.
00:05:31
She also threatened to expose *** to a drug operation. The leader of the gang hired *** to take her out.
00:05:38
Entered April's home, shot her twice, and left without detection. He was found dead from a heroin overdose 18 months later.
00:05:47
The drug ring continued until was arrested for weapons and obstruction charges in 2017.
00:05:54
I was actually working at a local CVS at the time and we were amused by the arrest story until multiple patients came in requesting medications with zero refills left And guess who the prescriber was
00:06:06
Whoa. Not sure if you can call the county jail to verify a new prescription. Anyways, after that arrest, ****** was also brought in on charges related to the drug ring.
00:06:16
He was also accused of making plans to have ****** killed for fear that he would flip on him.
00:06:22
both men were charged with first degree murder of april kaufman in 2018 one week after the murder
00:06:28
charge was found dead in his jail cell due to an apparent suicide although some including me
00:06:35
100 believe this was a hit job by the gang either way there's one less devious asshole alive on earth
00:06:42
wow wow thank you again and sorry for the lengthy ass email stay sexy and vet your doctors
00:06:51
Cassidy. Wow, that would have been a good full episode. That's crazy. Story is insane.
00:06:59
Should we cut it? And so one of us can cover it. But I mean, that's like, what is it with doctors?
00:07:08
I think of that one dateline I watched where the doctor, whoever the host was, I bet it was Keith Morrison,
00:07:13
was basically asking all these questions and he was just very flatly answering and you just knew he did it.
00:07:19
The way he was answering like absolutely was not there and you're like oh my god you were there you're making yourself seem
00:07:26
guiltier doctors don't let your husbands grow up to be a drug drug drug ring mule for the
00:07:33
motorcycle gangs god please tense yeah okay um this is called a girl a murder and a pizza place
00:07:41
hello spooky murder friends this is a bit long so i'll just get right to it i'm from a small town
00:07:47
in Northern California called Rodeo. Do you know it? Is it Rodeo? I don't know what the pronunciation is, but I think it's
00:07:55
east. It's northeast. Okay, there's more, but I just want to make sure I'm saying it right. I don't know.
00:08:01
Rodeo. That's probably right. Our biggest import is meth, and our biggest export is members of Green Day.
00:08:10
Oh, maybe it's not too far. The lead singer's mom still lives there. Kind of a lot of fucked up
00:08:15
shit happens there. But those are stories for another day. One of the neighboring towns is
00:08:19
called Crockett, and it is also tiny. You know it? Not heard of no. I haven't heard of either of
00:08:24
those towns. Okay. Crockett is most famous for the C&H sugar factory. All the kids from rodeo
00:08:30
in Crockett attend the same elementary, middle and high school. We all know each other and the
00:08:34
vibe is a very typical small town suburban weirdo vibe. There is a single pizza parlor in Crockett
00:08:40
called Four Corners. On September 24th, 1996, a sweet baby angel named Priscilla Lewis
00:08:47
was working her usual shift at the pizza place when she was attacked and murdered
00:08:51
in the creepy basement bathroom of the strip mall in which Four Corners is located.
00:08:56
Oh, fuck. That's horrible. She was only 21 years old and was working hard to save to buy a home.
00:09:01
There's some conflicting theories on how she died, but the most popular one is that
00:09:04
someone snagged her from the top of the stairwell. The staff at the restaurant hardly used that bathroom
00:09:09
because it was so creepy and dragged her downstairs where she was then strangled to death.
00:09:15
Her body was found by the cook when he went downstairs to look for her after she didn't
00:09:18
return from her break before closing. The case is still cold and Priscilla's murder has yet to be
00:09:24
caught. I was six when this happened, so my mom rightly so shielded me from Priscilla's horrifically
00:09:29
sad death. When I got to middle school, one of my older sister's friends told me Priscilla's story
00:09:34
while we were eating at the pizza place. And I was hooked. I convinced myself that I would solve Priscilla's murder
00:09:41
and ask my mom 3,000 questions about it every single day for at least a month. Alas, I never solved the case,
00:09:47
but I also never went into that creepy fucking bathroom, which I'm pretty sure is 100% haunted.
00:09:53
This is just one of the many upsetting stories from two tiny Northern California towns,
00:09:57
a planned murder-suicide between sisters that went awry, that asshole Lawrence Singleton being moved in
00:10:03
and then promptly being run out of town by the locals. That's a sorry. That's a rodeo.
00:10:08
Yeah. All right. Crockett or she doesn't say it doesn't say. I feel like that's the way I know the name,
00:10:14
but yeah. Yeah. Well, that's yeah. Yeah. And then, but it's the main one that has had a lasting impression on me.
00:10:23
Thank you for all you do. And I can't wait to catch a live show when this shithead pandemic is over.
00:10:28
I truly don't know what I do without the podcast. SSDGM, Nikki. Wow. Oh, that's also small. I mean, a town so small that two tiny towns share a high school. Those are tiny towns.
00:10:42
And to me, it doesn't seem like a murderer just like swoops in real quick, kills the girl at the pizza place and swoops out like that's someone from town.
00:10:50
So that's got to be terrifying to just have it go unsolved. Yeah, entirely because what is it? 90% of murders are someone someone knows.
00:10:59
The likelihood that it's a stranger is very low. Right. Or a stranger to her, but he's still somebody who's like neighbor.
00:11:07
I don't know. Yeah. Like known in town. Yeah. Yeah. Connected somehow. Connected.
00:11:13
Okay. Okay. This just starts. Hi, Karen, Georgia and everyone. Thank you. Thank you.
00:11:22
Just everybody. Hi. My hometown is from Alexandria, Egypt. In 1920, two sisters, Rhea and Sakina, ran several brothels in a poor area called El Laban, pretty close to my house.
00:11:36
We're talking to someone. I know. We're reading an email from someone who lives in Egypt right now.
00:11:41
That's crazy. I am. First of all, hi. I love all the Nova specials about your town.
00:11:49
Can we get an honorary degree from Egypt? I'm sorry about Alexandria's library. That a real disgrace okay welcome we so happy to have you okay let get back to the C Okay The brothels were interesting because they didn just house sex workers but were quote
00:12:07
secret homes to anyone who wanted to get it on away from prying 1920s Egyptian eyes.
00:12:14
Oh, shit. Oh, man. Many of the patrons were actually married women meeting their lovers.
00:12:20
Oh. Around that time, many women were being reported missing. Witnesses said they were always last seen wearing a lot of gold and with either or both of the sisters.
00:12:31
For some reason, that wasn't enough proof. They were questioned. The sisters were questioned, then released.
00:12:37
Until one night, a police officer was passing by Reyes house and smelled a really strong incense.
00:12:43
I guess that was more suspicious than being seen with every single one of the 17 missing women.
00:12:48
and they searched the house's brothels, finding 15 bodies buried under all of them.
00:12:56
Oh, no. Apparently, Raya and Sakina would go to the market, find the woman wearing the most jewelry,
00:13:02
invite her over to the house for drinks, then suffocate her with a wet cloth over her nose and mouth.
00:13:08
They stole their jewelry, money, and clothes before burying them. This news was pretty sensational
00:13:15
because at the time, women's crimes were usually limited to, quote, killing their husband's second wives.
00:13:22
Oh, my God. Because it's the 20s. Wow. It's Egypt in the 20s. Sure. The media went crazy, and at some point, a headline read,
00:13:31
Raya and Sakina in the zoo, which got people to flock to the zoo to see them in a cage
00:13:36
and then realize it was just a room. Oh, my God. Good. I was like, wait. I know.
00:13:41
That's horrifying. Hold up. The sisters were helped by their husbands and two other men who are all convicted.
00:13:46
Raya and Sakina were the first women to be executed by the modern state of Egypt.
00:13:52
There were many movies and plays written about them, for some reason, mostly comedies.
00:13:57
I used to watch the play about them, recorded off the TV on VHS on a loop as a kid.
00:14:04
I thought they were so funny only to realize they were actual serial killers when I got older.
00:14:10
This is amazing. Stay sexy and don't go for a drink with the lady not breaking eye contact with your jewelry.
00:14:16
Salma. Say her name again. How do you say it? Salma. Salma. Almost like Salma Hayek.
00:14:23
S-A-L-M-A. Salma. Salma. Salma. That was excellent. Excellent. Hometowning. We're so excited to have you.
00:14:32
Yeah. In the commute. Tell everyone we say hello. Everyone. Please. Tell all Egyptians everywhere that we say hi.
00:14:41
Okay, this one is called Underwater Ghost Town, and I just realized it's also from Northern California.
00:14:46
So, ooh. All right. Hey, ladies. After listening to a recent episode and learning about Georgia's deep passion for underwater ghost towns, I felt compelled to tell you my story.
00:14:57
I grew up in a small town. What? Is it your deep passion or mine? I think both of us.
00:15:01
I think most people. Okay. Yeah, how could you not? I don't really care. No. You're made of stone that you don't want to hear about the town covered in water.
00:15:10
No curiosity about life whatsoever. Okay. I grew up in a small town in Northern California just off the American River and adjacent to Folsom.
00:15:18
Yes, Folsom in the prison, but also Folsom as in the lake, a man-made lake that was built on top of the town known as Mormon Island.
00:15:27
So a little history. In the 1840s, a ton of people came to Northern California in search of gold.
00:15:32
A group of about 2,500 Mormons settled in present-day Folsom and founded Mormon Island.
00:15:38
In 1856, a fire destroyed the town and it was never fully rebuilt. Only a few families remained into the 1940s.
00:15:46
In 1955, the government built the dam, relocated the cemetery, and flooded Mormon Island.
00:15:52
Crazy. Are there a lot of Mormons in Northern California? No, I'm completely surprised because Folsom isn't too far from Sacramento.
00:15:59
It's like around the area. and I've never heard of Mormon Island. I've never heard of any of this.
00:16:04
Well, check this shit out. It gets crazier. Check this fucking shit out. We learned about this weird history in school
00:16:09
and in anecdotes from parents and grandparents, but during the drought of 2011 through 2017,
00:16:15
we saw the evidence for ourselves. Foundations of homes started to emerge from the beaches
00:16:20
and rusted tools and gold panning equipment were taken to museums. Treasure. Treasure.
00:16:26
True treasure. Then on November 13th, 2015, the skeletal remains of a human were found by a 12 year old boy.
00:16:34
And then it says, no, it says nightmare town kid. Wait, nightmare town for that kid.
00:16:39
Back up then. If you can't handle it, don't go to underwater ghost towns. If you can't handle the truth about underwater ghost towns,
00:16:48
all I wanted was to find a skeleton. Oh my God. Well, a hundred percent. Um, the remains were transferred to Chico state university for forensic analysis.
00:16:56
And in June of 2018, they were identified as the remains of Oleg Zalivnikov. Oleg was a Russian immigrant who had gone missing while swimming in the lake in freaking 1996.
00:17:08
Oh, no. Which means I spent my entire childhood swimming with a dead guy. Yeah. When Oleg disappeared, he left behind an eight-year-old daughter.
00:17:16
She lived in Russia still. So with the help of the FBI in Sacramento and Moscow,
00:17:20
they were able to confirm his identity using DNA. Oh, I know. Oleg's remains were then cremated in the same mortuary as my grandma.
00:17:29
The daughter came to El Dorado County in October of last year, 2019, to collect the remains and bring them home to Oleg's final resting place.
00:17:39
Love you, gals. Stay sexy and don't swim with dead bodies. Lacey. Ugh. Ugh. I know.
00:17:46
Why is it always chaos when we link up? Because nobody plans anything, bro. Good thing the rug's ready like that.
00:17:51
For real. Rain, dirt, whatever. available all drive five modes we still outside and they got some kick too that turbo torque is crazy the most in its class it moves moves rogue doesn mess around and peep the space merch on merch gear
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electrical vehicles based on manufactured websites. Hey everyone, it's Cal Penn, host of Earsay, the Audible and iHeart Audiobook Club.
00:18:32
This week on the podcast, I'm sitting down with Will Wheaton, who played Gordy Lachance
00:18:37
in Stand By Me 40 years ago, and now narrates Stephen King's The Body, the novella that
00:18:43
inspired it all. We talk about what it's like to return to a story that shaped his life, channeling his
00:18:49
memories of River Phoenix and the recording booth and why the friendships you have at 12
00:18:53
might be the most important ones you'll ever have. I know Gordy Lachance. I am Gordy Lachance.
00:19:01
Like, I mean, even when I was a little kid, I was Gordy Lachance when I didn't know it.
00:19:06
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preserving. Data accurate as of 2-20-26. I'm not going to read the subject line of this one
00:19:45
because it gives it away. Okay. Hey y'all. It just starts, hey y'all, fun fact, when you die,
00:19:52
as a way to recycle your body, you have the option to have your body cremated and the carbon from
00:19:58
your ashes pressed into pencil lead and made into pencils. Why would you do that? Why would anyone
00:20:04
want that? I would totally do that. There's so many other ways to. This process yields about
00:20:10
200 pencils per human body. So when the unspeakable should happen, you can become pencil or you can,
00:20:19
you can do what I'd like to do, which is have the carbon from my ashes pressed into a diamond
00:20:24
and given to the youngest person in my family. No, no, do pencils. I think pencils is more,
00:20:29
it's more of a keepsake to do a fucking number two pencil instead of a big old diamond ring.
00:20:34
But wait, they say, give it to the youngest person in my family. So when someone explains
00:20:39
how beautiful the ring is, my distant relative can say, oh, thanks. It's my grandmother.
00:20:44
Moving forward. My aunt Lydia, sister of my mom's sister's husband, died suddenly a few years ago
00:20:52
from something I think diabetes related. I wasn't very close with her, but because she and my aunt
00:20:58
and the other sister-in-law severely disliked one another. And so she rarely attended family
00:21:03
gatherings. She had been a very wealthy and very eccentric woman, always wearing very colorful,
00:21:10
flowy outfits and enormous jewelry made from beautifully exotic stones. Those Egyptian sisters would have loved her.
00:21:17
Oh, that's right. They would have been all over her. The jewelry pieces always had some
00:21:21
amazing story behind them, like who they belonged to, and most importantly to Lydia,
00:21:26
how much they had cost. So when she died, you can bet your ass that the sister-in-laws raided
00:21:31
her home immediately to snatch up all of her beautiful expensive jewelry. Lydia had kept a
00:21:38
handful of the more expensive pieces in a safe in the wall of her garage, but over the coming days,
00:21:44
they found more pieces hidden throughout her home. Jewelry was hidden in the rafters,
00:21:49
stowed away in holiday decoration boxes, taped up in the back of cabinets, inside mattresses, and stowed in her safe deposit box.
00:21:59
Whoa, she sounds awesome. I love this. This is the dream. Yeah. So the sister-in-laws gathered up every piece they could find, sprinting straight to the
00:22:09
jeweler to have the pieces appraised. And you guessed it. Every last piece was fake.
00:22:15
Yay! Worthless jewelry! Every single piece of jewelry Lydia had ever owned, shown off and talked about, had been
00:22:23
nothing other than costume jewelry. The whole story makes me kind of sad, but I like to think that it was just a long con executed by Lydia to disappoint the women she hated the most.
00:22:35
One last time from beyond the grave. I wish I had the discipline. So stay sexy and become wealthy by buying fake jewels.
00:22:43
Dana. I love it. That is just perfection. Epic. Because if that's really what she, if she did it on purpose, which clearly she did.
00:22:53
Right. Oh, my God. That's the best. That's incredible. It's all taped up into her house like it's even more valuable.
00:22:59
You got to just at least let your family think you're hiding some worth like some shit that's worth something, right?
00:23:07
Got to. Just so that that one weekend, it's not just sad that they clean your house out.
00:23:12
There's also a bit of treasure hunting involved. Okay, here's my last one. This is called Things You Find in the Desert.
00:23:18
Hi, I obviously wouldn't be writing in if I wasn't deeply obsessed. So let's jump right in.
00:23:22
my dad was 16 years old when both his parents died in a plane crash in Arizona. His mother had taken up piloting.
00:23:30
Is that a word? Question mark. Yes. Right. When my dad got into high school and they died in an unexpected plane crash in January 1977.
00:23:40
Fast forward to 1997 and my family was living in Phoenix. It was around the date of the 20th anniversary of the accident.
00:23:46
And the priest at our church suggested to my dad that perhaps they try and visit the site of the crash to get closure.
00:23:51
they never had. My dad said, I saw the trip to be an opportunity to introduce my mom and dad
00:23:58
to my adult life. My dad was connected with a retired sheriff from the area as he was trying to gather more information about the location of the crash.
00:24:07
Unbeknownst to my dad, the sheriff had been the first deputy on the scene and was the one who had found his parents' bodies.
00:24:14
When my parents, aunt and uncle were hiking to the crash site, they saw something totally unexpected.
00:24:20
My grandmother's plane, the one that had crashed 20 years prior. What? They had no idea it was still there when they set out on the hike that day.
00:24:28
As they approached the crash site, they found the ragged remains of his mom's cosmetic bag that still held a bottle of perfume with some perfume still in it that my dad had given her for Christmas in 1976.
00:24:43
Oh, and they found her curling iron. No. So that's the story of my grandparents dying in a plane crash and my parents finding the plane in the desert 20 years later.
00:24:51
Stay sexy. And next time we're allowed to touch another human being. Hug your loved ones tight.
00:24:57
XO Jordan. Oh, Jordan, that was beautiful. Like just finding a little treasure, a memory that no one had found in 20 fucking years.
00:25:09
Well, you know what's funny? Every time I go back you know I was just back up in Petaluma I always go through my mom drawers to see if there something because because you know my it all kind of as it was Yeah But I always look for is if there something I never seen before
00:25:25
Yeah. Or like something, you know, something to take or whatever that isn't just like most of it's like old nail
00:25:29
polish. Yeah. Or, you know, there's nothing, but like that idea that there'd be something so connected,
00:25:37
you know, because the smell or just the bottle itself, like he can take that back with him.
00:25:41
Have you looked for any hidden treasures? Like maybe your mom taped an envelope. I would think like an addresser to the top of the drawer. That's where I would tape an envelope.
00:25:49
Well, you know what I did? I did find a card from her when it was I think it was like right when our stuff started popping off.
00:26:00
And there was a card from her from when I very first moved to L.A. just about how proud she was of me.
00:26:07
And it was very like it was perfect because it was like I forgot that my normal regular mom was big into sending cards.
00:26:17
So it'd be like, you know, St. Patrick's Day cards or like Halloween cards. She was so cute.
00:26:23
Yes. She was a big card person. She had a drawer full of like unsent cards because she always had one ready And so I strive for that And it so hard So fucking bless my soul for doing that She did it But at the time it like one of the many things I took for granted that then later on
00:26:41
when I went and pulled this thing, and I can't read, I must have been keeping it somewhere and
00:26:45
just kind of forgot. Yeah. So yeah, that that was like the closest like something like that,
00:26:50
because it was her writing and it was her words. But I love that every time you go in and like,
00:26:55
see if something jogs a memory or is actually a keepsake that you hadn't even thought of.
00:27:01
I've gone through that. Does it still smell like her or nail polish? It smells like nail polish.
00:27:06
The nail polish, all that kind of stuff. There's old lipsticks and stuff. Oh, yeah.
00:27:11
That's adorable. Yeah. Well, send us your touching one. Touching stories, please.
00:27:18
We need these in times like this, on Mondays like this. On Mondays like this, we need some touching things.
00:27:26
Yes, please touch us. Touch us from a social distance. Yes, don't touch us, but touch us.
00:27:31
Touch us deep inside. That's right. And stay sexy. And don't get murdered. Goodbye.
00:27:37
Elvis, do you want a cookie? Why is it always chaos when we link up? Because nobody plans anything, bro.
00:27:45
Good thing the rug ready like that For real Rain dirt whatever available all drive five modes we still outside and they got some kick too that turbo torque is crazy the most in its class it moves moves rogue doesn
00:27:59
mess around and peep the space merch on merch gear mics all of it fits load up we out 2026 nissan
00:28:08
rogue built for all of it auto pacific segmentation 2026 rogue versus latest in-market competitors in
00:28:14
the ex-SUV mainstream mid-sites class, excluding electrical vehicles based on manufacturer websites.
00:28:21
Across America, money is being abandoned. By taking a few seconds to check lift before your
00:28:27
next ride, you can give money a better home inside your wallet. Save the money. Check lift.
00:28:35
This episode is brought to you in part by Vital Farms. Have you noticed that the egg section at
00:28:40
The grocery store has gotten very complicated lately. But Vital Farms makes it simple.
00:28:44
Pasture-raised eggs, traceable to the farm. Their hens have outdoor access year-round with fresh air and sunshine and forage on rotated pastures with local grasses.
00:28:52
Every carton can be traced back to the farm it came from so you can see the pasture where the hens live by visiting vitalfarms.com.
00:28:59
Look for the black carton in the egg aisle and visit vitalfarms.com to learn more.
00:29:04
Vital Farms. Good eggs, no shortcuts. Goodbye.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 80
    Most shocking
  • 75
    Most heartbreaking
  • 75
    Biggest twist
  • 70
    Most dramatic

Episode Highlights

  • 2026 Nissan Rogue: Built for All of It
    The 2026 Nissan Rogue boasts impressive features like all-wheel drive and turbo torque.
    “It moves moves. Rogue doesn't mess around.”
    @ 00m 23s
    June 29, 2020
  • Murder Mystery in Egg Harbor Township
    April Kaufman, a local radio host, was found murdered, leading to a chilling investigation.
    “Her husband was suspected, but there was insufficient evidence.”
    @ 03m 09s
    June 29, 2020
  • The Horrific Tale of Raya and Sakina
    Two sisters in 1920s Egypt ran brothels and were later found guilty of murdering women.
    “They stole their jewelry, money, and clothes before burying them.”
    @ 13m 08s
    June 29, 2020
  • Lydia's Jewelry Revelation
    Lydia's sister-in-laws discover all her jewelry is fake, revealing a long con.
    “Every last piece was fake.”
    @ 22m 11s
    June 29, 2020
  • Emotional Discovery
    A family finds their loved ones' plane crash site 20 years later, uncovering memories.
    “Like just finding a little treasure, a memory that no one had found in 20 fucking years.”
    @ 25m 01s
    June 29, 2020

Episode Quotes

  • Wow.
    MFM Minisode 181
  • This is where shit gets crazy.
    MFM Minisode 181
  • Oh, no.
    MFM Minisode 181
  • This is amazing.
    MFM Minisode 181
  • Every last piece was fake.
    MFM Minisode 181
  • Touch us deep inside.
    MFM Minisode 181

Key Moments

  • Chaos of Linking Up00:05
  • Murder Investigation03:09
  • Sisters of Death13:08
  • Underwater Ghost Town14:46
  • Long Con22:35
  • Emotional Closure23:51
  • Unexpected Discovery24:20
  • Touching Memories26:07

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown