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212 - Hot Money

March 05, 2020 /

This episode of My Favorite Murder covers the tragic story of the Corpsewood Manor murders, discussing the lives of Dr. Charles Scudder and Joseph Odom, their relationship, and the events leading to their deaths. The hosts, Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark, also touch on the cultural implications of the case and the societal perceptions surrounding the victims.

Karen and Georgia begin by introducing the story of Dr. Scudder and Odom, who built their dream home in the Appalachian foothills, seeking to escape societal norms. They highlight the couple's eccentricities, including their connection to the Church of Satan and their welcoming nature towards neighbors.

The narrative shifts to the night of the murders, detailing how two local men, Avery Brock and Tony West, conspired to rob the couple, leading to a violent confrontation. The hosts describe the emotional aftermath of the murders, including the impact on the local community and the media's sensationalism surrounding the case.

Karen and Georgia discuss the broader implications of the murders, particularly how the victims were portrayed as deviant due to their lifestyle, and how societal biases contributed to the narrative. They also reflect on the importance of understanding the humanity of the victims.

The episode concludes with a discussion on the legacy of the Corpsewood Manor murders, including the ongoing fascination with the case and its representation of the struggles faced by marginalized individuals.

TLDR

Karen and Georgia discuss the tragic Corpsewood Manor murders, focusing on the lives of Dr. Scudder and Joseph Odom and societal perceptions of their lifestyle.

Episode

1:21:13
00:00:00
This is exactly right. Why is it always chaos when we link up? Cause nobody plans anything bro.
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00:01:53
Hello! Welcome to My Favorite Murder. The podcast. What more do you want? That's Karen Calgarra.
00:02:08
That's Georgia Hartstark. Now what more do you want? Now what more do you want? Because we just gave you more, which is the introduction of our names.
00:02:13
Oh, a whole hour and 45 minutes of utter nonsense? Fine. Easy enough. We'll just start talking.
00:02:21
Here we go. Oh, your boyfriend wants you to turn it off? Too bad. Put your headphones in and ignore that creeper.
00:02:31
Right? Absolutely. What's going on? I don't think anything. I have not much. Oh, we have a merch sale going on.
00:02:40
And we also am excited to say that we found out that. So we had for sale the My Favorite Murder black and white pen,
00:02:46
an animal pen that we were selling. And we sold out of it. And all the proceeds were going to go to RAINN, Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network.
00:02:56
Right. And so we sold out of the pins and we are donating 10 grand to RAINN. RAINN gets 10 grand from you guys because you guys played ball with this pin idea.
00:03:08
Thank you so much. We're so excited to be putting your money where we want to put it.
00:03:14
Where our mouths are. That's right. And so we're going to get a whole new batch in stock, and we're going to pick another really worthy cause, and we're going to have all the proceeds of the next sale go to that.
00:03:26
So we're going to keep doing it. So keep adding that My Favorite Murder black and white pin to your Yeti Truther shirt or whatever.
00:03:33
Whatever you sew to your dog collar with a thing on it. Right. I can't remember what the dog collars look like.
00:03:38
And we'll give all the proceeds to a worthy cause. That's right. So that's exciting.
00:03:42
Go to MyFavoriteMurder.com to talk about it. to talk about it. No, you can't talk at your computer.
00:03:49
Get on your CB, but sit in front of your computer so you can get... Okay, I feel like
00:03:56
we talked about The Sinner season one when it was Jessica Biel as the star. She's now still the, I believe,
00:04:02
one of the executive producers. But it is now season three of The Sinner. The great Bill Pullman is still the detective.
00:04:09
Still being the creepiest creep. He has got lower back problems that's impeding his ability
00:04:15
to walk around freely and it is the most amazing acting a person that's he's like i'm a beleaguered
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of course detective he's also such an awkward weirdo in it it's so it's so charming but also
00:04:27
in real life i feel like i'd be like i don't want you detecting my fucking shit are you seriously
00:04:32
i'd be like excuse me could you detect over here in my in my boudoir uh i love his thing it's like
00:04:40
He's damaged and he's hurt, but he's also noble and he's trying to fix something.
00:04:44
Anyway, this season, season three, starring Matt Bomer, who you know personally, Georgia, from the Magic Mike series of stripping.
00:04:52
Was he in that? He was. Okay. At least in the Magic Mike part two. He's got that chiseled jaw thing going for him.
00:04:59
Matt Bomer is so good looking. He looks surprised at how good looking he is. I bet he's so good looking that people are like, we can't give you like certain roles because nobody looks like you.
00:05:10
Yeah, it's I'm I started having a hard time with this one. And then I went, this guy's such a good actor.
00:05:15
He's overcoming his own face. Right. Which looks like a poster for like a diamond company.
00:05:22
Your unfortunate, beautiful face. Your face that would stand in the way of most acting.
00:05:27
But you're good at it enough and clearly have adapted in your life. Yes. Where your beautiful face isn't standing in the way, but also is adding to what a creep you are.
00:05:36
Because also how amazingly creepy is Chris Messina? Yeah. Who plays the creepy friend.
00:05:42
He is such a good creep. God, and also he wasn't really like that. Well, he was on the Mindy Project.
00:05:46
Oh, that's it. And he's been on a ton of stuff. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he's usually the like hunky kind of the guy girls like.
00:05:54
And then this thing He reminds me of Zachary Quinqua you French I was like was it pinto beans or quinoa
00:06:05
I couldn't remember. My claim to fame is that one time in the early 2000s, I got to go.
00:06:13
We went on a road trip with Zachary Quinto. Because we went to San Francisco for the weekend and Mary Lynn was on 24 with him.
00:06:19
So he came with us and we had a whole weekend. It was he was the best. Love it. Anyway, all that aside.
00:06:28
Oh, yeah. So Chris Messina, the first moment he's on screen, like a door opens and he's standing there.
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And I was like, I got to chill just by how he was like his. Dead eyes. Yes. He was like such a good villain.
00:06:41
Yeah. It's so impressive. Anyway, I feel like it's like very no one's talking about it's a little bit unsung where it's like the sinner delivers every season.
00:06:50
I'm holding hands with it. I'm caressing. it's a beautiful, unfortunate face. I wrote down
00:06:59
your unfortunate, beautiful face. That has to be the episode name. Okay. I mean,
00:07:03
I don't like deciding this early. I know. And I don't want to take away from Stephen
00:07:07
because Stephen writes down so many great ideas. It's Stephen's passion to read us
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his list of ideas. At the end of the show. And then we're like, when did we fucking say that?
00:07:15
What's that about? What? If I was Stephen, I would start adding in random shit that we never said
00:07:20
where it's like two burritos lying side to side. I started listening for like three years too late, but I started listening to the podcast Ear Hustle.
00:07:29
Yes. Holy crap. I mean, I knew it would be. It's incredible. I didn't think it would be good.
00:07:33
And now I know it's good because I'm listening. It's just really good. Yes. And it's basically daily realities inside prison.
00:07:40
And it's just what prison life is like. And I found out Ear Hustle means eavesdropping.
00:07:46
So just like talking shit and eavesdropping and stuff. It's really good. Also, I think, you know, podcasting is we talk about this a lot, but it's so intimate.
00:07:55
It's so personal. You're just on or at least we are just on mic like blah, blah, blah.
00:08:00
Here's what we think about. Here's what we care about. What a fascinating thing to instead of be always talking about people in this weird kind of objective, like distant way.
00:08:11
People in jail who, for whatever reason, they get to tell their own story. Yeah.
00:08:16
It's really cool and empowering and great. Yeah. And even the mundane stuff that they talk about, which isn't mundane, you know, the less like, here's my story and more like, here's how you get a cellmate in prison.
00:08:28
And this is what it's like. And the whole episode's about that. And it's like, just fascinating.
00:08:32
Yes. I really like it. It's very cool. It's very humanizing and very like, you know, you want to.
00:08:37
That's what all this. That's why all this is so awesome. Right. Is because it's like, then you hear that story and then you're like, yeah, you don't look at things the same way and people the same way.
00:08:45
Totally. Very cool. You don't judge people as much. You can judge them a little.
00:08:50
I mean, like, not everyone. Look, it's hard to refrain from judgment of ourselves, of those around us, of others.
00:08:59
Shit. Oh, OK. We have to do Exactly Right Corner. Yes. Our podcast network. We have a couple announcements.
00:09:06
This week's Murder Squad guest is none other than our very best friend, Henry Zebrowski,
00:09:13
from last podcast on the left. The greatest. Freaking adore. The greatest man. Such a great man. So that's on. They're talking about Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber, Monday, March 2nd. So that's up. This podcast will kill you just released a new episode about hepatitis C.
00:09:29
Amazing. Those ladies are killing it. And just so you know, and if you don't know already, now you know, one of the last ones they did was all about the coronavirus. So if you're nervous and you want to really know what's going on, they broke it down.
00:09:44
What side of the face mask are you on? Oh, I'm in the inside of my house side of the face mask.
00:09:50
Okay. Are you handshaking? Yes. Oh, so you don't care. I handshake. Then I give a kiss on the mouth.
00:09:58
I can't tell. Then I'll suck on your earlobe lightly just so you remember the exchange while you die and I live.
00:10:06
Because I'm taking in all bacteria, my immune system can fight everything. Okay.
00:10:11
You're getting little bits of it. Yep. Here and there. I'm used to you. I get gas and then I run my finger along the top of the gas nozzle.
00:10:18
No, no, no. Please don't say what you're going to say. Please don't say lick your finger.
00:10:22
You're going to go out there licking doorknobs and shit? Sure. Please don't. Just for the love of the game.
00:10:26
I'm pretty okay with it right now. I mean, I'll get there. Let's wait until there's good reason.
00:10:32
Right. And look, there's always good reason for lots of things, to freak out about lots of things in this world around us right now.
00:10:39
Absolutely. So let's just keep it chill. Yeah. Let's keep it chill. Although I will say was when I was leaving therapy this morning, I my therapist and I do a final hug.
00:10:47
Oh, I mean, we've been I've been going to her for almost 17 years. So it's like, OK, bye.
00:10:52
Thank you. Quick hug and a cough right over her shoulder. And I'm like, she burped you.
00:10:58
Yes. And it was the weirdest. Like, I didn't feel it until I was doing it. And I couldn't stop.
00:11:03
I'm like, I'm so sorry. I'm like, first of all, I'm not coughing. Yeah. As a practice.
00:11:08
It's not that just came out. She wasn't mad. she's legally not allowed to be mad at me.
00:11:13
That's right. You pay her to not be mad at you. The Purrcast in an interspecies cuddling turn of events
00:11:18
has Brooke from the Fall Line guesting on it. Nice. Isn't that cool? Yeah, it's awesome. And then the Fall Line
00:11:24
themselves have episode four of season six, the Cedartown Jane Doe episode. So make sure you listen to that.
00:11:32
They're doing the God's work. Karen, tell us the next one. Oh, Do You Need a Ride
00:11:39
with Chris Fairbanks and Karen Kilgara. The great April Richardson is featured on.
00:11:43
She's visiting over here from her new life over in Brighton, England. And so she came over to do some stand-up dates.
00:11:51
And she's staying with me, so I made her do my podcast. Hell yeah And it was perfect I mean it wasn very eventful right Stephen We just kind of drove all around Yeah we just drove to Swingers Yeah that right And then we got there and then ate and then drove back Guys as of now as of next Thursday March 12th
00:12:09
Yes. The big premiere of I Said No Gifts with Bridger Weineger. We're so excited.
00:12:14
It's going to be so hilarious. Please try it out. Please subscribe to I Said No Gifts just because it'll push them up in the charts and then more people will see it.
00:12:22
It'll be really awesome. and the premiere can be this big, exciting thing that is very well deserved.
00:12:27
Yeah, it's very well deserved. And if you watch the Comedy Central show Corporate,
00:12:31
the guest on the premiere episode is Matt Ingebrigtsen, who's one of the two stars of Corporate, along with Jake Wiseman.
00:12:38
And he's a hilarious, amazing comedian. He has a great speaking voice. I love him.
00:12:43
The two of them have been friends for years. So it's a great episode. Yeah. Yeah.
00:12:47
We're so excited to finally have that one come out. I know. It's so cool. And I remember they recorded that one.
00:12:51
And then Steven told me and he was like, it was so good. And I was just like, I knew.
00:12:56
I just knew. I know. I knew. I knew it. So, yeah, it's very exciting. And now we're going to start rolling out the new podcast.
00:13:02
Yeah. It's real cool. Things are moving and grooving. Yeah. Who's first this week?
00:13:10
Karen. Really? Why is it always chaos when we link up? Because nobody plans anything, bro.
00:13:16
Good thing the road's ready like that. For real. Rain, dirt, whatever. available all-wheel drive five modes we still outside and they got some kick too that turbo
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torque is crazy the most in its class it moves moves rogue doesn't mess around and peep the space
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00:14:55
the choice you make on social media Instagram I don't like to endorse it but you can
00:15:02
no I am on Twitter and so on Thursday morning when I wake up I'll usually just kind of look at my Twitter
00:15:09
real quick to see if anyone is screaming in all caps at me just to do a quick pass of like, excuse me, whatever the excuse me pass and nothing was
00:15:19
really happening. And then I stumbled upon this tweet. This was from someone named John Bird at
00:15:24
jbird tweeted. That's his handle. His tweet said, I love my favorite murder and Karen Kogareff,
00:15:30
but yeah, then you know, the bad things coming. I need to flag that Sally Ride was not on the
00:15:36
Challenger when it exploded. Ride was the first American woman to go into space.
00:15:43
And then there was more of the tweet, but I had already left my body from what a fucking devastatingly terrible, stupid mistake that was.
00:15:51
And that was one of those ones where it was a conversation and it just came out.
00:15:55
And I said, yes, I do that to you all the time. Because you're good at improv. Yes.
00:16:01
And to me and support whatever comes out of my mouth. John, thank you, first of all, for being such a gentle, corrective hand.
00:16:09
Because it was the best way to learn that I had defamed two heroic American women.
00:16:16
So what do we do when we're horrified and we leave our bodies? Yeah. Yes, we do a big old corrections corner.
00:16:22
So this week I'm going to tell you all about the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
00:16:26
Hell yeah. You know that crossed my mind to do. Did you? Yeah. 100%. Yeah. So no, I had to do it.
00:16:33
And Jay Elias, my researcher and our coordinator, which we call him a coordinator.
00:16:39
That's his title now. He has a title coordinator. He did the research history dot com, space dot com, Britannica dot com.
00:16:45
And of course, the best science website in the world, Wikipedia. Please give them five dollars if you can.
00:16:53
But before we get into that, I would like to give you a quick yet comprehensive report on the great Sally Ride.
00:17:00
Great. So that you, I, no one ever makes this mistake again. Great. And most of this information is from Wikipedia, as well as her New York Times obituary.
00:17:09
She was born in Encino on May 26, 1951. Her mother was a volunteer counselor at a women's correctional facility,
00:17:17
and her father, Dale, was a political science professor at Santa Monica College,
00:17:21
and she had a sister named Karen. No way. I went to Santa Monica College, too. Did you?
00:17:26
Yeah. Was Professor Ride, did he teach you anything? No. Okay, so Sally starts playing tennis when she's 10.
00:17:34
By high school, she's ranked in the top 20 in the nation for the junior tennis circuit.
00:17:38
I don't know if you know how hard that is, but there are people who are insanely great tennis players,
00:17:43
and they only get to like 800 in the rankings. So she must have been spectacular at tennis and an amazing athlete.
00:17:50
She graduates from Westlake School for Girls in Los Angeles in 1968 She goes to Swarthmore College just outside of Philadelphia But after three semesters she I think gets homesick and moves back to California That editorializing
00:18:05
That's what I assume because she's like, this ain't for me. So then she starts taking physics classes at UCLA.
00:18:11
And she basically wants to play tennis professionally. Then in 1970, she transfers to Stanford.
00:18:19
So she's thinking about playing tennis professionally, but she's smart enough that she can just go, you know what, instead I'm going to go to Stanford.
00:18:24
Wow. Yeah. Which is she must have been. Obviously, she's an astronaut. She's really smart.
00:18:30
She becomes Stanford's number one women's singles tennis player. Holy shit. She even met Billie Jean King while teaching a tennis camp in the summer.
00:18:39
And Billie Jean King told her to quit her job and go pro. Wow. That's how good she was. Yeah. But instead, Sally stays at Stanford and she earns degrees in English and physics.
00:18:49
Usually those are very disparate subjects. The students do not hang out in the same area of the life.
00:18:58
I was going to say the snack bar of life. In the snack bar. The canteen. You know the snack bar at Stanford.
00:19:07
What do they sell there? They're just money. Mechanical pencils. Money. Money. Yeah.
00:19:11
You can buy hot money. In 1975, she earns her master's specializing in astrophysics and free electron lasers.
00:19:21
Oh, I learned that at Santa Monica College. Right? Remember when you dabbled in free electron lasers?
00:19:26
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then she goes on to get her PhD in 1978. So she's the real deal.
00:19:31
So while she's finishing her post-grad studies at Stanford, she applies to the NASA Astronaut Group 8 program.
00:19:38
There are 8,000 candidates, and she's one of 35 accepted in this program. Oh, my God.
00:19:44
And only six women in the group total. Wow. She completes her training in August 1979.
00:19:49
She gets her pilot's license and becomes eligible to be a U.S. space shuttle mission specialist.
00:19:56
So on June 18th of 1983, Sally Ride takes her first trip to space in NASA's seventh space shuttle mission, STS-7, aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger.
00:20:06
She's the first American woman in space and the third woman in space globally. There were two female Russian astronauts, cosmonauts, I think they call them, that got there first.
00:20:16
Got it. But she is the first American woman. Cool. So the point of that mission was to deploy two communications satellites.
00:20:23
Sally operated the robotics arm that made the deployment of them. Could you imagine?
00:20:28
No. Well, she also plays tennis with it. They're like, you got a great swing robot.
00:20:33
It's like a very small asteroid comes by. And she's like, guys, I got to take that robot.
00:20:37
My God. Love or whatever. Love 40. Yeah. In 1984, she again goes on a mission on the Challenger on NASA's 13th shuttle mission, STS-41G.
00:20:51
OK. If you're keeping track at home. Between those two trips, she spends more than 300.
00:20:57
Within those two trips, she spends more than 340 hours in space. Wow. She is in training for her third mission on January 28th, 1986, when the Space Shuttle Challenger explodes during launch.
00:21:10
Sally Ride is appointed to the Rogers Commission to investigate the cause of the explosion.
00:21:16
She's the only astronaut or specialist appointed to both this commission and later to the 2003 commission to investigate the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster that killed all seven crew members as it disintegrated upon reentry into the Earth's atmosphere.
00:21:30
So Sally Ride was there for both of those and was there to investigate both. She left NASA in 1987 to work at Stanford Center for International Security and Arms Control.
00:21:41
In 1999, she becomes a physics professor at UC San Diego, and she dedicates her life to encouraging students, especially girls, to study math and science,
00:21:51
developing programs under her nonprofit, Sally Ride Science. She even writes a couple children's books about space exploration.
00:21:58
On July 23, 2012, Sally Ride passes away at her home in La Jolla, California from pancreatic cancer, which is horrible.
00:22:07
She was only 61 years old. Oh, my God. In 2013, Sally Ride was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for all of her life's work, her extraordinary life's work.
00:22:18
And that is the story of Sally Ride, the first American female astronaut in space.
00:22:24
That writes all the wrongs from last week. Both of ours. I get it, too. I mean, but later when I in in, you know, putting this together, saw that they both wrote on the challenger.
00:22:38
I was like, this is my excuse. Yeah. This is my rationale. Take it, grab it, run with it.
00:22:43
Right. Which would would imply that I knew they were both on the challenger, which is completely impossible.
00:22:48
You absolutely knew that. I absolutely knew it. I was 16 when the challenger exploded.
00:22:53
So I was very aware of it happening. But I definitely. Did you guys watch it in class?
00:23:00
Or were you too old, do you think? No, we saw it on the news afterwards. Yeah. I mean, our school didn't do stuff like that.
00:23:06
You had to have a teacher have a nervous breakdown to get that AV cart pulled in and watch some dumb movie.
00:23:12
They would not give you that for just anything. Well, television is the devil. Right.
00:23:18
And it'll rot your brain. Now open to Ephesians 629. So now let's talk about the Challenger, the explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger.
00:23:27
So on Tuesday, January 28th, 1986, a crowd of hundreds gather at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral in Florida for the Space Shuttle Challenger's 10th launch.
00:23:39
The shuttle's primary mission is to deploy the second tracking and data relay satellite, TDRS-B.
00:23:46
You don't have to do that. I mean. What a day you mean. I feel. I'm weirdly kissing up to like
00:23:51
the person remember the guy we met that works at JPL I wish I could remember his name off the top
00:23:57
I'm so sorry he was the best No, he was a fan. Him and his wife loved the show. And he was super cool.
00:24:04
And he gave me and Stephen and Scotty Landis a really good tour of JPL. The guy who gave us a tour is Lou and his wife's name is Lindsay.
00:24:12
Lou at JPL and your wife, Lindsay. Hi, friends. Thank you. Okay. So that satellite helps astronauts in space communicate with ground control.
00:24:21
So they're basically putting up more communication satellites. But their second mission is to release a small satellite called the Spartan Halley spacecraft,
00:24:28
which would follow and observe Halley's comet for two days. Remember when that was such a big deal?
00:24:33
Yeah, I remember that. And then after two days, it would be picked back up by the Challenger crew before they return home.
00:24:40
So the Challenger is the second space shuttle ever to reach outer space. It completed nine missions over the course of three years
00:24:46
and was the same shuttle that Sally Ride manned three years before as the first American female astronaut to go into space.
00:24:54
Connections. Love them. There it is. I must have known deep down. Okay, so on board are five NASA astronauts.
00:25:01
Commander Francis Richard, a.k.a. Dick Scobie, pilot Michael J. Smith, and three mission specialists,
00:25:07
Ronald McNair, Ellison, Ana Zuka, and Judith Resnick. And the sixth crew member is a payload specialist named Gregory Jarvis.
00:25:16
So a payload specialist is not an official NASA astronaut. They're brought on the mission by NASA because they have certain academic training or skill sets
00:25:25
that are needed for a particular mission. So they're trained rigorously by NASA,
00:25:30
but they're usually researchers or engineers. But they're not allowed to look outside the window.
00:25:34
They're banned from looking out that space. You have to earn that. Yeah, that's right.
00:25:37
You have to be a real astronaut to get the view. And you certainly can't touch that arm.
00:25:43
Sally only. Sally's tennis elbow. Do not touch Sally's racket. Her space racket.
00:25:49
Yeah. Okay. So the seventh and last crew member on this mission is 37-year-old Krista McAuliffe.
00:25:56
So she is a high school social studies teacher from Concord, New Hampshire, who won the Reagan administration's
00:26:02
Teacher in Space Project. So she's trained by NASA, and as, well, I'll talk about the Teacher in Space Project
00:26:08
in a little bit. I wish you would. Because I know you're baffled. What could that mean?
00:26:13
I don't know what that... Wait, they bring space back to a classroom? Hold on a second.
00:26:18
They make a teacher stand in a certain space and teach? So she gets trained by NASA as the mission's second payload specialist.
00:26:26
Okay. In addition to her regular onboard duties, she also planned to teach two 15-minute lessons from space.
00:26:33
So the first would involve a tour of the space shuttle to explain the basics of how it functions,
00:26:38
and then the second one about the benefits of space travel, and both of them will be broadcast to millions of students through a closed-circuit classroom TV system.
00:26:47
I was five, so I bet that we were doing that. Right. Right? Well, I think they were seeing it as, first of all, the Reagan administration did a ton of cuts to education and the funding.
00:26:59
They sure did. They were like, here's how to get all of them at once. Yeah. So this was this thing where they're like, well, we'll do something nice for teachers.
00:27:06
It'll make us look good. But then also we'll get people, because NASA, having been so huge in the late 60s, interests had waned.
00:27:15
So they were like, they're going to beef it all back up again. Guess what, guys?
00:27:19
Yeah, this was the way they were going to do it. So at 11.38 a.m., after several delays that morning, the shuttle lifts off in front of an audience of hundreds on the ground at Cape Canaveral and millions more watching on their TVs at home and in classrooms across the country.
00:27:36
But just 73 seconds after liftoff, disaster strikes. Okay, so let's go and talk about Krista McAuliffe more specifically.
00:27:44
She was originally Sharon Krista Corrigan from Boston, Massachusetts, and she followed the space program very closely as a child.
00:27:53
She watched John Glenn's orbit of the Earth in Friendship 7 in 1962, and of course, the 1969 Apollo moon landing.
00:28:00
She was fascinated by all of it. So she grows up to marry her high school sweetheart, Stephen McAuliffe, in 1970.
00:28:07
They have two kids named Scott and Caroline. And in 1984, when President Reagan announces the initiation of the teacher in space program, Krista finds out about it and she rushes to apply.
00:28:18
There are 11,000 teacher applicants from all over the country. And I was reading this article about it.
00:28:24
And one of the guys who was one of the finalists said that they had 11 different essay portions of that application because they were trying to weed out the people that were just trying to be like, oh, I want to, you know, I'm just in it for the name and glory.
00:28:38
Or something like that. But it was like, if you're going to actually write 11 essays, you really want to go to outer space.
00:28:45
We've done it. You've got to commit. We obviously want to go to outer space. So Krista gets nominated by the state of New Hampshire, and then she goes on to become one of the 10 finalists selected by an official review panel in Washington, D.C.
00:28:59
God, those people had to read so many fucking essays. I mean, I bet you they didn't, though.
00:29:04
Yeah, but there were like three words in. Did they even finish the essay? Okay, then put it in this pile.
00:29:09
So on July 7th, 1985, Krista McAuliffe and the other nine finalists travel to Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, for a week of briefings, medical exams and interviews.
00:29:20
And when that week's over on July 19th, 1985, Vice President George H.W. Bush announces that the winner of the teacher in space program is in fact Krista McAuliffe.
00:29:30
She takes a year long leave of absence from teaching and begins training for the mission.
00:29:34
Wow, how incredible. Yeah. Must not have felt. Just an amazing opportunity. And like you would never in your life think that that's what you would get to do.
00:29:43
Once in a lifetime opportunity. Yeah. So cool. Okay. So the Challenger's launch is initially set for January 22nd, 1986.
00:29:51
But the team at NASA encounters a couple different delays. So first another mission had run long So they can launch the Challenger until the other mission comes back which I think is kind of funny There a wait in line It like is this Southwest Airlines
00:30:06
Like, it's weird that you wouldn't schedule this a little further apart. Yeah. But that was basically what happened.
00:30:12
Or like, is the schedule that random that it might take one day or it might take seven days?
00:30:17
You know, we hung out here by the Big Dipper for a little too long. We decided to go to the hour space snack bar.
00:30:22
hang out sorry just like the one at stanford so that was the first delay the second then the
00:30:30
launch is delayed because of bad weather and the third delay is caused by technical issues first
00:30:35
there's a broken exterior latch and then there's a stripped bolt so finally the launch date is set
00:30:40
for january 28th 1968 no i know wow finally the launch date is set for january 28th 1986
00:30:51
But the day before, the engineering company, it's called Thiokol, they're responsible for some of the construction.
00:30:59
They tell NASA that they believe it'll be too cold to launch because the forecast is calling for temperatures as low as 30 degrees Fahrenheit in Florida, which is kind of insane.
00:31:09
It is January, but it's Florida. And that actually, that temperature is the bare minimum that you can launch a shuttle at.
00:31:17
And so they recommend postponing it. But the NASA manager that was in charge of the launch says that they can't recommend a delay without proposing a minimum temperature to target.
00:31:27
So they all hop on a conference call to discuss it. Guys, don't leave it up to conference calls to fix it.
00:31:33
I got to this part in the paragraph and I was just like, God, I hate conference calls.
00:31:37
But engineers love them. So they get on the horn. Everyone starts talking. The people from Thiokol, they reiterate their concerns.
00:31:45
They explained that the rubber O-rings used to seal the joints on the solid rocket boosters, which from now on I'll call SRBs because that's what they call them.
00:31:54
I wish you wouldn't. The SRBs. Okay, so these O-rings are confirmed to function at 54 degrees Fahrenheit at the lowest.
00:32:04
So any temperature below that could be dangerous. What? So if the primary O-rings fail, there are secondary ones that kick in.
00:32:11
If those fail, the shuttle could destruct. guys so now the nasa officials on this conference call they dismiss the concerns they're convinced
00:32:20
the secondary o-rings will get the job done if the first ones don't you shouldn't plan for something
00:32:25
to fail right no and you shouldn't be like but then yeah it's not that big of a deal where it's
00:32:30
like these other things will take care of it i think this is the kind of thing where in retrospect
00:32:35
it seems inane totally but in this kind of like very bureaucratic world where they're like look
00:32:42
We got to hit these schedules. Pushing it a couple of days is probably hundreds of thousands of dollars.
00:32:46
It's millions of dollars. Yeah, probably. I mean, we're both wrong. We're definitely both wrong.
00:32:52
Both are very wrong. I feel like of all the conversations I can be wrong in, one's about being an astronaut.
00:32:58
It's really up there. Yeah. But basically, they're just saying, I can't, we can't just keep on delaying this.
00:33:04
Like, this is, there's so much press about it. Everyone's waiting and watching. We understand that you guys are kind of worried, but it's fine, basically.
00:33:12
So on the morning of March 28th, the temperature in Florida is 28.9 degrees Fahrenheit.
00:33:18
The launch pad is covered in ice. So a team works to remove the ice, but the temperatures are, you know, dangerously low.
00:33:26
They delay the launch a bit to give the ice more time, the ice team more time to clear the ice.
00:33:31
You know, they're out there with their ice picks. Yeah. How we know they do. How you know they get rid of ice.
00:33:38
Yeah. Okay, so when the ICE team reports that the ice does seem to be melting, they reset the launch for 11.38 a.m.
00:33:47
And so at exactly 11.38 a.m., the countdown begins. The crew ignites the solid rocket boosters, the SRBs, and the shuttle lifts off.
00:33:57
But just as Thiokol feared, the O-rings in the right SRB are too cold to function properly, and the joint in the right SRB fails.
00:34:06
Pressurized burning gas escapes from that booster, interacts with the external fuel take.
00:34:12
And 73 seconds after liftoff, the space shuttle Challenger explodes over the Atlantic Ocean.
00:34:20
Millions of Americans are watching live, including thousands of children, probably tens of thousands of children watching from their classrooms.
00:34:29
And Krista McCullough's family who are watching in person at Cape Canaveral on the ground.
00:34:35
Can you imagine the kids in her class back at home watching? I mean, I think it was April.
00:34:42
She was like, I saw that. I remember seeing it. I was in second grade. And she said her teacher burst into tears and just rolled the TV back out of the room.
00:34:52
Like the entire nation was traumatized altogether at once on that morning. You can watch the video online and think of watching it live.
00:35:02
you know and like it fucking like there's no question it explodes. No it's not like oh there
00:35:08
seems to be a problem. It's just like out of nowhere. This thing that everyone had been looking forward to that they'd been talking
00:35:15
about. And like it feels so patriotic. Yes. Right like we're all we're all like it's so hopeful.
00:35:21
Yeah it's like they were kind of trying to recapture the initial that you know those early days of space exploration
00:35:26
it's like we're back and we're strong and we're doing all this stuff. And we have teachers with
00:35:31
It's for the children. There's civilians on that shuttle. So it goes without saying, none of the seven crew members survive.
00:35:39
After the explosion, NASA's launch recovery director sends search and rescue teams to recover the victims' bodies and the debris.
00:35:47
The recovery is so extensive, it lasts more than a week. When it comes to sharing information with the press, NASA becomes very closed off.
00:35:54
They tell the public almost nothing which of course all of America is demanding answers So Reagan commissions a committee to investigate what exactly would be
00:36:05
So Reagan commissions a committee to investigate what exactly caused the explosion.
00:36:09
That is the Rogers Commission, which Sally Ride served on. The chairman was William P. Rogers, politician and lawyer who previously served as attorney general and secretary of state.
00:36:20
There are 13 members total, including Neil Armstrong and Sally Ride. Commission finds that NASA neglected to heed the very real and very important warnings from Thiokol over the course of several years leading up to the disaster.
00:36:34
So there were engineers in other parts of NASA that were checking it out and going, hey, we need to be careful about these.
00:36:43
I think the O-rings, just that whole idea, there were warnings that happened before the day of.
00:36:49
It wasn't just the temperature issue. Yeah, or these things that were made for this rocket aren't going to work right now.
00:36:54
It's like these have been made for years. Right. And they're ignoring the warnings.
00:36:57
Because I think, you know, obviously that's the kind of thing that gets tested and looked at and investigated constantly.
00:37:05
NASA's insistence that the secondary O-rings were enough of a safety measure was against protocol because the O-rings were listed as a critically won component.
00:37:14
So this means that if the component fails, everyone could die. So it is actually forbidden to rely solely on the backup part for something like an O-ring.
00:37:23
I mean, that makes fucking sense. I'm not an astronaut. But at the same time, they created a very untenable situation with the pressure where they can't just keep delaying it.
00:37:35
And it doesn't look good. Everything about that, when I was reading this part anyway, I just felt so terrible for the team that was trying to make this decision.
00:37:44
Can we just do this? They were used to it. This was like, you know, this was a thing.
00:37:48
The shuttle went up a lot. And I was probably like, there's always some critical thing that needs to be decided on last minute.
00:37:55
Right. This is just another one of those. Yeah. Afterwards, the U.S. House Committee on Science and Technology holds hearings on the matter as well.
00:38:02
On October 29th, 1986, they released their report that agrees and goes along with the Rogers Commission.
00:38:09
They ruled the disaster was due to poor technical decision-making by top NASA and contractor personnel, effectively splitting the blame between NASA and Thiokol.
00:38:18
As a result, NASA is unable to launch any other shuttles or spacecraft for nearly three years.
00:38:25
And they work on a total redesign of those SRBs. And in the case of the Challenger, Thiokol gives up their multi-million dollar incentive fee in exchange for not accepting liability.
00:38:37
But afterward, because I'm sure they were like, we told you. But afterward, NASA adds a clause to their contract with that company stating that in the event of a technical failure causing, quote, loss of life or mission, that Thiokol would forfeit $10 million of its incentive fee and formally accept the blame.
00:38:57
Okay, so the remains of crew members are recovered, and on April 29, 1986, astronauts Dick Scobie, Judith Resnick, and Michael Smith are all buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
00:39:10
Mission Specialist Ellison Onizuka is buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii.
00:39:16
Ronald McNair is buried at Reslawn Memorial Park in Lake City, South Carolina. And Krista McAuliffe is buried in her hometown, Concord, New Hampshire, at the Calvary Cemetery.
00:39:27
Every year in late January or early February, NASA holds its Day of Remembrance to honor the lives lost in the Challenger tragedy, as well as those lost in the Apollo 1 fire of 1967 and the destruction of the Columbia in 2003.
00:39:42
And in 2015, the Kennedy Space Center opened an exhibit called Forever Remembered, where visitors can see debris from the Challenger's final mission.
00:39:51
So this is pretty cool. Instead of building a monument for their loved ones, the families of the Challenger crew established a Challenger Center for Space Science education program, basically introduces students to space science and provides space simulation missions that kids can experience for themselves firsthand.
00:40:10
And the program gives them the chance to learn teamwork and problem solving and encourages them to explore the world around them.
00:40:18
And it's grown to be an international success, serving more than 250,000 kids globally every year.
00:40:24
And that is the heartbreaking national trauma that was the explosion of Space Shuttle Challenger.
00:40:30
Wow. Great job. Way to make good. Make good. It's a make good story. It's a make good horror story.
00:40:39
but those are i'm glad i know the difference now and we'll never make that mistake again and we'll
00:40:43
very quickly and sharply correct people we all do well that was great and i'm glad you did that
00:40:50
me too that was a that was a good one thank you why is it always chaos when we link up because
00:40:58
nobody plans anything bro good thing the rug's ready like that for real rain dirt whatever
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00:43:03
Default terms at MintMobile.com. I got this suggestion from the Fan Cult Forum. We have a message board of suggestions that people send in.
00:43:15
And they send them in and they write them with their finger. They type them, Karen.
00:43:19
Do you know how to... Is it still in all caps? It's a CB. Yeah, it's still in all caps.
00:43:23
So this was suggested by C. Baird. And this is a story that is the craziest one I had never heard of.
00:43:30
Really? So this is the Corpsewood Manor Murders. I love it already. Any idea of it?
00:43:37
It doesn't sound familiar to me. Okay, great. I got info from Ingestigation Discovery.
00:43:42
What if Ingestigation Discovery is just weird shit people ingest? they're like look a whole saw how did she ingest that let's take an ingestigation discovery
00:43:53
an article by christine colby and all that's interesting article by uh gina de murrow a
00:44:00
website called abandoned southeast.com that is a person who is a photographer and goes around to
00:44:06
all these abandoned buildings and places in the southeast takes photos and tells you the story
00:44:11
about them okay there was a in one of my first very difficult and uh highly demanding office
00:44:18
jobs where i was basically there from nine in the morning till nine at night when i finally would
00:44:22
have a moment to myself that those are the websites i would go on to people taking pictures
00:44:27
of like this used to be a steel mill right and now it's literally rusting top to bottom and no
00:44:33
one's allowed in here and when you go here at night you hear weird sounds or whatever there's
00:44:37
Like there's, you know, high schools that have lockers and their desks are all still.
00:44:41
I mean, they get to go in all of those places and they tell you about them. So go check that out.
00:44:46
It's abandoned southeast dot com. I got an article from the Chattanooga Times Free Press by Tyler Jett, a website called Week in Weird article by Ken Summers, Rome News Tribune article, the lineup dot com article.
00:45:01
There's a lot of articles out there about this by Oren Gray. And then I checked our emails and my favorite murder emails and someone, this person by the name of S.A. Hunt, who's an author of like gothic fantasy, interesting novels.
00:45:17
It's S.A. Hunt Books dot com. Kind of like broke the whole story down for me using quotes from different authors who've written about this story.
00:45:24
Amazing. So it was really helpful. And then I also got one article from the website for Church of Satan.
00:45:30
Hell yes. By Peggy Nadramia. All right. So, you know, this is going to be something.
00:45:36
The Church of Satan's evolved. Exactly. Let's do this thing. All right. Here we go.
00:45:40
In the 1970s, Dr. Charles Scudder was a professor of pharmacology at Loyola University in Chicago, and it was at the Institute for Mind, Drugs and Behavior.
00:45:52
Guess what that means? Acid? That's right. That is right. They basically performed government funded experiments with mind altering drugs like LSD.
00:46:02
fucking what's up MKUltra. What's up? Yeah. Nice. Welcome to the party MKUltra. Now did these people know they were being experimented?
00:46:11
I don't know any details. Okay. But probably not. Meet Ted Kaczynski. Hello. And then we go down that rabbit hole.
00:46:17
That's not okay. So he was described by coworkers as brilliant and soft spoken, but confident.
00:46:23
He was definitely an eccentric, especially for the, you know, kind of conservative university
00:46:28
in the 70s. He would dye his hair purple. At one time he owned a monkey. he was kind of like he seems like a perfect absurdist and contrarian and organ grinder
00:46:40
right did your monkey have a vest that's right dr scudder uh was divorced and had four grown
00:46:48
sons and he lived in a deteriorating mansion in chicago along with his two enormous english
00:46:55
Mastiff dogs. You know, those big guys with all the drool in the face alongside.
00:47:02
And the face. The big faces. Yeah. Alongside a, quote, quite feminine man named Joseph Odom.
00:47:09
So it being the 1970s and being gay, still considered very taboo. Joseph Odom was described as a housekeeper and a, quote, companion to Dr. Scudder.
00:47:19
Sure. But in reality, the two men were in a longtime relationship. And in fact, Joseph Odom, went by Joey, helped to raise Dr. Scudder's kids.
00:47:28
So they were companions. They were companions. They were in a relationship. They were life partners.
00:47:33
They were life partners. But by the mid-70s, Dr. Scudder was fed up with university politics, the constant upkeep and bills related to his fucking dilapidated home, and the general bullshit hustle and bustle of life in a big city.
00:47:47
And probably also not getting to live his life as an openly gay man. Yeah, there'd be a lot of restrictions. I think also Chicago being very Midwest and kind of a very traditional place, at least it felt like that when I lived there.
00:48:00
where my friend wore overalls to Nordstrom one day, and these women were staring at us like we were nude.
00:48:05
Wow. It was one of the weirdest experiences where I was just like, they're just overalls.
00:48:09
Yeah. It's a fashion thing. Right. Okay, I like that. So he and Odom decided they were over it,
00:48:15
and they were ready to escape the chaotic city life. So Dr. Scudder found a 40-acre plot of land in the Appalachian foothills.
00:48:27
Appalachia. deep in that so dr scutter found a 40 acre plot of land in the appalachian appalachian throw an
00:48:34
appalachia appalachian foothills deep in the remote woods of northern georgia so what were
00:48:40
you saying about conservative no they went out of the frying pan into the fire that's right he's
00:48:45
like i better dye my hair green now they were completely so it's 40 acre plot completely
00:48:51
surrounded by national forest that he bought it for super cheap and so in 1976 on his 50th
00:48:57
birthday, Dr. Scudder resigns from Loyola University like later days, motherfucker.
00:49:03
Bye, see ya. Sold off or gave away nearly everything he owned and set off with Odom and the dogs, whose name were
00:49:11
Beelzebub and Arsonoth, to begin a new peaceful life in the Appalachians, where they could build their
00:49:19
dream home and live off the land. Wow. I don't know. This seems like the beginning of a horror movie.
00:49:25
It is. Okay. So, Scudder said that, quote, the change was like crawling out of an old outworn skin.
00:49:32
Oh. Yeah. It's like super positive. When they arrived that first winter to what was basically just some old treed up land
00:49:39
and... Is that a word? Treed up land? Do you mean like forest? Treed up land. No, I don't mean forest.
00:49:48
Yes. It got all treed up. It was their land, but it was treed up. This weren't no cleared out land.
00:49:56
It was treed up. Treed up on the floor. It was treed up to the gills. It was at the top of a winding logging trail.
00:50:07
And the men looked around. They see these trees in the middle of winter all gnarled and shit.
00:50:13
And they were like, let's name this new homestead Corpsewood. That was their idea.
00:50:18
That was their idea. Okay. I thought you were going to say they were like, let's tree this shit down.
00:50:23
They're not from Chicago. Oh, that's right. During the next two years, the men cleared the treed land.
00:50:30
They traded it down as the term. Thank you. And used 45,000 bricks to build by hand what Scudder referred to as, quote, their castle in the country.
00:50:41
So they weren't architects. They had never built anything before. They dug fucking trenches and laid down pipes for plumbing.
00:50:50
But they built it themselves. I don't know if you should. I don't know. Unless they're just, if it's just a plain old square, that's fine.
00:51:00
But a castle? I think from back then, too, it was like you just did shit yourself.
00:51:06
True. And I'm sure if, you know, college professor and like a housekeeper that's holding shit down, that maybe they're like, we've got this plan.
00:51:15
Let's do it this way. Well, they did it. And wait till you see it. Oh, it's it looks like a legit medieval.
00:51:21
like a small scale medieval macabre brick castle. Really? Yeah, it's pretty cool. It's got a turd, an entryway
00:51:30
and a winding staircase inside leading up to the second floor. They built fucking
00:51:35
a second floor. Here's Steven, show her. Is that the new one? Let me see. Is that the new one?
00:51:41
Yeah, yeah. Okay, well they do in this one, it's the finished and it has a gargoyle, so that's
00:51:49
adding to the creepiness. Spoiler alert. super sorry no we can take that no no give it back to him because you're gonna read too much
00:51:56
well i'm not reading anything but i'm just saying this is there is a real um it's almost like the
00:52:02
blair witch got like a designer yeah and she's like let's do this thing yeah because it's it but
00:52:08
it is i'm telling you i'm looking at this picture it's treed up it's treed up there's trees all over
00:52:13
can i have you and steven apologize to me right now for laughing at me never damn it okay so um
00:52:19
So Corpsewood Manor was almost completely self-reliant. I guess they had no electricity, but had an on-site well for water.
00:52:28
Okay. It had a wood stove for cooking and for warmth, a chemical toilet in the outhouse gardens, and they grew their own food.
00:52:36
And behind the house was a small vineyard for making homemade wine. Nice. So this was like a nice little villa with these two lovely gay men who wanted to get the fuck away from the confines of everyday society.
00:52:48
and their bullshit and judgment and fucking build their dream house. And they did it.
00:52:53
They fucking did it. They did it. Yeah. In addition to the castle that they lived in, they also built a smaller building they
00:52:59
called the chicken coop. On the ground floor was a chicken coop. Okay. So that makes sense there.
00:53:04
Above that was like they kept the chicken feed and canned goods. And then on the top floor was something of a boudoir.
00:53:12
Yeah. Which you said that word earlier and it's like in my story. Oh, holy shit.
00:53:16
Psychic lock in. There it is. So depending on where your info comes from, the boudoir was either where the couple would host gatherings and for guests to stay overnight in.
00:53:27
Or it was a sexy sex room with BDSM paraphernalia and porn and stuff. Sure. I mean, look, first of all, it's natural.
00:53:36
Do whatever you want. And secondly, they're not moving out into the woods to read books.
00:53:40
I'm telling you. And you know what? It could be both. It could be like. They could do it all.
00:53:44
Yeah. But why not? If you're out there anyway, like if you're getting away from everybody.
00:53:48
Yeah. And you're away. Yeah. Do what you want. Exactly. Get a slide from the boudoir down to the chicken coop.
00:53:54
That's right. See what happens Prying eyes man Either way it was nicknamed the pink room Okay So i think they and they would have guests from out of town come stay with them i think i think um dr scudder who was
00:54:07
such an eccentric had like friends from all walks of life and like to hang out with them i would
00:54:11
i would be friends with dr scudder immediately he was probably the coolest person to hang out with
00:54:17
hell yeah and he had acid right that guy yeah see the acid guy yes and joseph odom over here was an
00:54:24
incredible cook and like super sweet and lovely. So like they were so much fun. And all their food was organic.
00:54:30
Yeah. Which is great for me because I'm super organic. I'm so vegan. Thank you. Finally.
00:54:38
It's the food up to my level of quality that I'm looking for. That's right. Karen's so picky.
00:54:43
God, when we're on the road. I'll be like, Jerry, are there any GMOs in this? Because I can't have it anymore.
00:54:49
Karen, we're at the Cracker Barrel. does this rice pilaf have preservatives in it okay and there is a pink gargoyle in there oh
00:54:59
was that the one the one you said was pink yes that's kind of genius okay but here's a little
00:55:04
thing here's an eccentricity about dr scutter okay he was a card-carrying member of anton lave's
00:55:11
church of satan okay all right yes so that you're sorry just just say really quick as a as a kid who
00:55:17
grew up in the 70s, young child, because Anton LaVey had a house in San Francisco.
00:55:22
Yeah, we're going to talk about. Okay, but it was very scary. And it was kind of used in this way. But actually, the Church
00:55:29
of Satan is not scary at all. So it's so here, let me we're gonna do a Satan corner real quick.
00:55:33
Great. Technically, Dr. Scudder was an atheist, who quote, believed in the unity of the universe.
00:55:39
But he was fascinated with religions, he was fascinated with the occult. And he seems that
00:55:44
He enjoyed the kind of fuck it, like fuck the system, hedonistic, humanistic mentality of Satanism, which, guys, that's what Satanism is.
00:55:52
Technically, atheistic Satanism does not acknowledge the existence of either God or Satan.
00:55:57
They're fucking atheists. All that satanic panic, evangelical bullshit. You know, don't buy into the hype, guys.
00:56:05
Your parents lied to you. Okay. So in a sense, Dr. Scudder, when he eschewed his normal life in Chicago and moved into the forest to live out his dreams, is in line with his satanic beliefs.
00:56:16
Right. So he didn't actually believe in Satan or the devil, but as a symbol of self-reliance, independence, and individuality, which is what satanic people stand for.
00:56:27
I don't know. Satanists, it's kind of cool. They like to stir shit up, which I think is pretty, in this funny, absurdist way.
00:56:35
that I appreciate. Well, and also they're really about human rights. Right. Because it's that kind of thing of saying,
00:56:41
you don't get to say, you know, abortion is illegal and immoral, therefore I'm going to kill you.
00:56:48
Because that in and of itself is so hypocritical and so insane. And it's like...
00:56:54
You don't get to pray in school. If you're going to pray to a Christian God in school,
00:56:58
then they're going to come around and sue that fucking school district to say that they get to say
00:57:03
the satanic rituals in school. Like they just they don't want satanic fucking prayers in school.
00:57:08
They want to prove to you that these other religious, you know, these other religious entities shouldn't either.
00:57:14
Right. Because they're saying, so you don't approve of my religion, which is, quote unquote, the Church of Satan.
00:57:19
Yeah. And that's easy to to it's easy to understand why that's you can't approve of that.
00:57:25
Yeah. But they're saying, I don't approve of your religion. Your religion is like the Church of Satan to me.
00:57:31
Right. And it also it is a wake up call to when you are indoctrinated into the religion you were raised in.
00:57:38
You see other religions as as not real. You see other people as believing and being lunatics and like, oh, they're extremists.
00:57:46
They're they're, you know, whatever zealots. And it's basically calling everyone on their shit and going.
00:57:52
That's what everyone is, that when you're in a religion and it's not your own personal spiritual path, but instead this kind of group think.
00:57:59
and it's ways to control, to alienate and to then justify your attacks on other people.
00:58:06
Guys, take LSD and open your minds. Also, look at what shirt I'm wearing just now.
00:58:10
I realized I haven't done my laundry. It's a big Star of David and it says Hebrews on my shirt right now.
00:58:17
Well, that's bullshit, man. I'm Jewish. I'm going to sue you. I'm an atheistic Jew.
00:58:22
What am I going to do about it? What are you going to do? Okay, so. This is interesting.
00:58:26
Yeah. All right. So I just want to get across how sweet they seemed and how fun they seem.
00:58:33
Yeah. And how independent and they just wanted to live their lives. Back in a time where you really were not allowed to.
00:58:41
You were not. No. So because he was so interested in the occult, Dr. Scudders, and then I put hashtag decor inspo, was all kinds of strange macabre objects and antiques.
00:58:52
antiques. In fact, when he left Loyola University, he took with him two skulls, two like ancient
00:58:59
skulls that he used as decor, which is such a like goth high school decor thing to do.
00:59:05
Yeah, it's very metal. And some vials of LSD. Well, hell yeah. He was also about to get treed up out there.
00:59:13
I mean, we're going to sit out there and make friends with the motherfucking trees is what's
00:59:17
going to crap in. You're going to climb them. You're going to climb them? Get all up in them.
00:59:20
You're going to become a tree yourself. So he was also an artist. He created stained glass window pieces that he used as the windows of the house, including a stained glass Baphomet sigil.
00:59:32
Baphomet, yeah. Did I say that right? Which is the symbol of the Church of Satan, which is that cute little goat.
00:59:37
Hi, I'm the goat. Yeah. A pink gargoyle. I told you about that. And a sign outside that read, Beware of the Thing, which is actually from the Addams family.
00:59:47
So clearly he was a playful Satanist. Well and also it almost like they built the perfect house to draw high school students to come around And to get like the locals to start talking about them Yes And either maybe even stay away like get scared of them or But I bet it going to go a different way
01:00:06
Unfortunately, they should have gone to Northern California to do that. Yeah. Where all the hippies were.
01:00:10
Exactly. Chill, man. That's funny. Right. So despite the locals living in the neighboring town of Chattooga County, being scandalized
01:00:19
by these two gay Satanists. The kindness and hospitality that Scudder and Odom, you know, showed to the neighbors was
01:00:27
evident and they were always willing to have guests over to enjoy a few glasses of their
01:00:31
homemade wine or listen to Dr. Scudder professionally. He could professionally play the harp as well.
01:00:37
Holy shit. Yeah. So it seems like a lot of the neighbors became to or started to like them.
01:00:43
Dr. Scudder and Odom spent six years living in their dream home, building and digging
01:00:48
and caring for the land. They made friends with some of the locals. There was a wedding
01:00:52
hosted in the Rose Garden that Odom had planted. And when local hunters would come by and ask the
01:00:57
couple for permission to hunt on their land, they would always allow it. Great. And this is how it's thought that they came into contact with a 17-year-old local
01:01:06
named Avery Brock. Brock was a hunter and a part-time truck driver, and he had been invited
01:01:13
to Corpsewood a number of times to hang out in the pink room. And there's some speculation that
01:01:18
At one point, he possibly engaged in sexual activities with either both or one of the pair.
01:01:25
But it seems as though Brock became friends with the couple and hung out and drank wine with them on a couple occasions.
01:01:32
So in November 1982, though, Avery Brock moves into a trailer that belonged to a 30-year-old unemployed construction worker named Tony West.
01:01:40
And Brock told West about the, quote, queer devil worshippers and how he thought that because Scudder and Odom, they lived this life that was so laid back and carefree and, you know, kind of indulgent that they must have a shit ton of money stockpiled at Corpsewood.
01:01:57
Oh, no. Right. So Brock and West began devising a plan to rob the couple and run away to start a new life.
01:02:03
on the night of december 12th 1982 brock and west picked up two teens uh joey wells who was
01:02:12
west's nephew and his girlfriend theresa huggins and the teens had tried to go on a date but their
01:02:17
car wouldn't start so brock and west were like just come with us we're gonna go drink at the
01:02:21
satan house or whatever um and once there the group were invited in by dr scudder they drank
01:02:29
wine and the local kids huffed what was locally known as toot-a-loo. What? Toot-a-loo, a.k.a. paint thinner and glue.
01:02:40
No. They had a name and they would just huff this stuff. Toot-a-loo. And then they'd be.
01:02:44
Scatter's like, I have pure LSD. What more do you need? Or gorgeous wine that we made ourselves.
01:02:51
He gave them the wine, but it doesn't seem like he actually used or gave out the LSD.
01:02:54
It might have just been this like kind of souvenir he brought from Loyola. So he wasn't drugging kids.
01:02:59
He wasn't. It doesn't seem like he was selling it. Maybe his out of town friends would take it.
01:03:03
Who knows? Sure. After several hours of drinking and talking, Brock said he was going out to the car to mix up some more toodaloo.
01:03:12
But when he returned, he was holding a rifle. And West held a knife to Scudder's throat as he was tied up and led from the pink room to the main house, which no one was allowed in the main house, which may be also why the pink room is where people stayed.
01:03:26
Oh, so they like hung in the chicken coop. That was like the party spot. Upstairs, BDSM, maybe.
01:03:32
Okay. So they take him into the main house while he's tied up. And all the while, Scudder himself is trying to calm the two teens down who they hadn't been aware of what was happening.
01:03:43
And they were scared for their lives. They attempted to get the fuck out of there, but the car wouldn't start.
01:03:49
Oh, no. So they'd come back and like be there for this whole thing. and so when Dr. Scudder was led into the home
01:03:56
he and his partner had built with their own hands and had just tried to live a fucking nice life together
01:04:02
without stupid fucking society coming down on them he was met with a horrific scene
01:04:07
Joseph Odom, his long time companion lay dead on the floor having been shot in the head four times by Brock
01:04:15
alongside the couple's two beloved dogs but he killed the dogs too? Yeah, before they brought.
01:04:23
So they basically went in and killed everyone in the house, every living thing in the house.
01:04:27
And then brought Dr. Scudder down to this scene. So like, it's just so, the thought of seeing this thing and not only is the love of your life, you see that horrific scene, you know you're like, it's just over.
01:04:42
Yes. What a terrifying last scene. Yeah. Teresa Hudgens later divulged that when Dr. Scudder saw his love dead on the floor, he sputtered and babbled incomprehensively and moaned in grief.
01:04:56
And he was led to the library and gagged while Brock and Wes demanded he tell them where the money was hidden.
01:05:06
Here's the thing. While it's true that Scudder did receive a small trust fund from his deceased father's estate, it was like $100 a month.
01:05:13
almost every cent he and Odom had had gone towards building the property so there was no money to be
01:05:19
stolen there was no cash there ever yeah and they just lived the way they wanted to live yeah um
01:05:24
at this point in his grief and so Scudder is trying to calm Teresa down and saying are you okay
01:05:31
like in his own fucking grief he's trying to calm her down which says she says she always remembered
01:05:35
um he defies the robber's orders and stands up from the couch and stumbles towards his lover's
01:05:42
body and his final words were i asked for this oh then he was shot in the head five times at point
01:05:51
blank range oh my god the murderers took anything of value they could find like a silver candelabra as a gold dagger a leather jacket And since their car wouldn start stole Scudder black Jeep and went on the lam
01:06:06
And then two days later, on December 16th, a neighbor called the county sheriff after visiting Corpsewood Manor
01:06:11
and noticing bullet holes in the door. And that's when their bodies were found. And that same day, Teresa Hudgens went to the police saying that she had escaped from Joey Wells' house
01:06:20
where he had been holding her captive since the murders. Just because the murderers were like, if you fucking tell anyone, we'll kill you.
01:06:26
So we'd been like trying to get her not to tell. But she escapes and tells the police.
01:06:30
And Hudgens and Wells cooperated with the police. And they're not charged. But now the police are in a nationwide manhunt for Brock and West.
01:06:37
The killers drove West and needing to ditch the black Jeep that they had stolen because it was too conspicuous.
01:06:45
Because fucking Dr. Scudder had painted pentagrams on the doors. And that's the fucking car they stole.
01:06:53
assholes um they uh they held up a man at a mississippi rest stop intending to steal his car
01:07:00
and the man is cooperating he's navy lieutenant kirby phelps he's on his way home to visit his
01:07:06
mother for christmas and uh west marches him into the woods and shoots him twice oh my god and kills
01:07:13
him they're they're like going berserk yeah totally um don't do toodaloo everyone god yeah
01:07:21
For real. I just realized that. Yeah. They're huffing paint thinner. Paint thinner and what?
01:07:29
Glue. Yeah, that's not good. No. The killers took Kirby Phelps' car and kept going, but within a short time, both of them had turned themselves in.
01:07:38
During the investigation. So this is almost the worst part. It's really all awful.
01:07:43
During the investigation, the police found what they, of course, consider to be bizarre artwork strewn throughout the home.
01:07:51
dark occult, you know, Satan-y shit. So they're like, these men were Satan worshippers.
01:07:57
And Tatuga County investigator Tony Gilland said, you could feel the presence of evil.
01:08:03
As if like Satan was there. You know what I mean? Yes. The evil had actually come from the two killers who identified as Christian
01:08:09
and in fact just attended a Bible study two days before their murders. See, I mean, look, it's...
01:08:14
Listen. You can't do it. It's not that simple. If only it were that simple that you could be guaranteed.
01:08:20
if you go to Bible study, you leave there and you'll never do anything bad. And then if you have pentagrams on your Jeep, that means you always do bad things.
01:08:30
If life were that easy and that black and white, we would all be so much calmer and having a better time.
01:08:36
But actually, people use religion to hide their own evil sociopathic bullshit. Or, and this drives me crazy, maybe it's because my religion that I was raised in doesn't have this,
01:08:48
but you'll be forgiven for whatever the fuck you do. You're going to be forgiven.
01:08:53
So it's all okay. That's not a thing. No. Well, not with murder. I mean, not with,
01:08:59
not with this kind of stuff. No. And also I can't, I'm like, what if you bet on it and you're wrong,
01:09:03
you know? But also I can't, that's not, they're not real Christians. If they're,
01:09:08
if they actually think, Oh, I can kill these people. I can do what I want. I can kill these people.
01:09:11
And then I'll be forgiven. Right. Like it. Yeah. That's not, that's not actually what Jesus wants for anybody.
01:09:18
Promise. I knew him first as a Jew. But I made really good friends with him at camp.
01:09:24
He told me. Okay. Among the couple's possessions was a self-portrait that Scudder had painted because he was an artist showing himself.
01:09:34
There's like a gag on him and five bullet wounds to his head. Stephen, pull it up.
01:09:41
And they found a number of books on the occult, several bottles of LSD and homosexual pornography.
01:09:46
Right. So, of course, they're like these evil men. almost, you know, saying they deserved what they got in obvious ways.
01:09:53
Meanwhile, what pornography would the police find on your computer right now? And homosexual pornography can also like in the 80s, it could be a book of art, of beautiful
01:10:02
art of naked men by an amazing, talented photographer. Right. Homosexual pornography to people who don't understand.
01:10:09
And also kind of the celebration of this culture that up until very recently was entirely
01:10:16
oppressed and threatened and you couldn't. So you had to have your secret Tom's of Finland book
01:10:22
that people passed around because everything you had, you know, so many people couldn't be out. Or they took fun naked photos in the pink room.
01:10:30
Whatever. That's the painting. Oh, that's scary. Isn't that creepy? I almost didn't want to
01:10:36
include it because it's almost unbelievable. That painting. We'll put it in the Instagram.
01:10:39
Also, though, the wounds on his head could be gunshot wounds but also it's very similar
01:10:46
to the wounds on Jesus aside from the crown of thorns. So it also could be that thing.
01:10:51
It's symbolic. Yeah. But yeah, that's pretty crazy coincidence. That's just like a weird little tidbit
01:10:57
that I almost didn't want to. I mean, also, it could be that thing too where the police are walking around
01:11:04
and they're just getting scared and they don't like feeling scared. I mean, you'll see the inside of the house.
01:11:09
It's kind of creepy. It looks like a medieval and they have this like baroque furniture
01:11:14
and like, you know, super macabre shit. So I understand that it's creepy to these people who live in fucking Laura Ashleyville,
01:11:22
but like, all right. It's like they're goths. They're just goths that went to the woods.
01:11:28
Totally. Okay. Okay. So of course, this whole thing turns into a media circus. Local news reporters are more interested in the couple's issues and eccentricities and
01:11:38
the devil worshipers than finding actual justice. So they become essentially what everyone thinks is like one of the most tragic victims of the satanic panic or early victims of the satanic panic.
01:11:49
Oh, yeah. And there's rumors about the couple's lifestyle, that they had homosexual orgies, that they raped children and there's drug use and all these things happening.
01:11:58
It's just all these rumors. Of course, you know, everyone in town goes nuts with these rumors.
01:12:03
And the sheriff had previously tried to bring charges against them for their behavior, the scutter in Odom, but found it was protected under the freedom of religion.
01:12:12
Yeah. You know, thank God. Thank God. Thanks, Satan. So, of course, in public opinion, many people thought that they deserved to die for these reasons.
01:12:22
And that's what really bothered me about when I first found this article in the fan or this story in the fan cult.
01:12:27
And I looked it up and the first couple articles I read, the subject line would be to Satanist, you know, get murdered.
01:12:34
It's just like kind of is still doing that and blaming them. Yeah. And then I read into it and it's the saddest fucking story I've ever heard about these two very innocent victims.
01:12:44
Some people hypothesize that if Navy Lieutenant Kirby Phelps hadn't been the third victim of Brock and West,
01:12:50
then maybe the killers might never have even been tried for murder because so many people didn't fucking care.
01:12:55
because the jury of their own peers would have dismissed it. Yeah, it's fine. You know what I mean?
01:13:02
Yeah. It's really sad. Eventually, West is found guilty of two counts of murder and sentenced to death.
01:13:08
And Brock pleads guilty and received three consecutive life terms. And they've both been denied parole many times.
01:13:14
And in the mid-1980s, a fire burned down Corpseville Manor. And today there is remnants of like brick ruins.
01:13:23
And that's all that stands of Scudder and Odom's dream home. And on the website Abandon Southeast, you can see all the photos.
01:13:30
Oh, wow. And it's like a beautiful old abandoned place that we would love to go to.
01:13:36
And teenagers and locals still sneak onto the property. Some of them steal the bricks that are left there.
01:13:41
But everyone's like, they're cursed. And my best friend broke her knee when she, you know, was leaving or whatever.
01:13:48
She was drunk. Exactly. She was on Toodaloo. And they all think that there's a curse there and everything like that.
01:13:56
But it's like, no. If there's a curse, it's because two people were murdered. Right.
01:14:01
Exactly. There's a small private funeral service held at Corpsewood Manor for Dr. Charles Scudder and Joseph Odom.
01:14:07
Odom's ashes were scattered in the Rose Garden by his family. And Dr. Scudder's ashes were taken back to Wisconsin by his sister and buried in the family plot.
01:14:17
And as I said, some of the articles still seem to like want to cast blame on them or make them these scary monsters.
01:14:24
But I did love that when I went to findagrave.com just to get some info, someone listed Joseph Odom as Dr. Scudder's spouse.
01:14:33
Yeah. And it really and it was just this really lovely moment. Yeah. And that is the Corpsewood Manor murders.
01:14:40
Wow. I've never heard anything about it ever. Ever. That's incredible. We've been in Atlanta.
01:14:47
We've been in Georgia to do live shows. I wonder if it's because it is this because of the moralizing and the kind of like this isn't the usual story.
01:14:59
Right. Because, yeah, I wonder if that's the reason. And there's a shit ton of books about it.
01:15:04
The Corpsewood Manor Murders by Amy Petulia. The Corpsewood, A True Crime Like No Other by Daniel Ellis.
01:15:12
Corpsewood, the eyewitness account, who actually is co-written by Teresa Hudgens.
01:15:16
Wow. She tells her account of the whole thing, and there's a lot of gory details that I've left out, obviously.
01:15:22
And then on MotherEarthNews.com is an article that Dr. Scudder wrote about what it's like to live off the land.
01:15:30
Oh, wow. There's a lot of quotes from him in that as well. I wonder if in any of those books there's the neighbors that they made friends with who were there to say,
01:15:38
I think so. Yeah, this isn't. Yeah. I'm a local. I'm one of the people that you think would be against, and I was friends with them.
01:15:46
There's a couple of neighbor accounts that are like, you could tell they talked about
01:15:50
it late one night and he explained to them what Satanism really means to them and they
01:15:53
understood it. Right. Which is not that he believes in Satan. Yes. Because also oftentimes you know in my hometown it very country and there you know a lot of people that live way out in the middle of nowhere And you would think that they would be you know you the the assumption is that oh it it you know farmers or they conservative and close minded and judgmental or whatever
01:16:16
And like when Christo in 1975, Christo built the running fence through Petaluma, went through our town and then out to the ocean.
01:16:24
And it was, you know, Christo is this unbelievable French artist that does huge like site specific like it's like sculptures.
01:16:33
But this thing with the running fence, I saw it when I was five years old and it was my dad has a picture of it in the living room.
01:16:40
It's so unbelievable and amazing. And all of these farmers and dairymen and people who had the land that they wanted to run the fence along.
01:16:50
they um they fought for it and they were saying you you know we get to do anything we want with
01:16:57
our land you don't get to say because because the local like the local city council in marin
01:17:03
county and sonoma county were trying to tell them you can't have that here we don't want your french
01:17:08
art yeah we don't want your whatever but then the actual farmers that own the land were like
01:17:12
screw you we can do you don't get to tell us what we do with our land and if we want them to do it
01:17:17
they get to do it and then they let them they did it and it was it's an incredible thing so i'm just
01:17:23
saying you know i think sometimes people live out away from society everyone has the same idea we're
01:17:29
like yeah we don't want that shit that group think mentality that oppresses other people just
01:17:34
well it came down to two fucking two bad seeds who were high on on greed and toodaloo and fucking
01:17:43
And just decided to take what they wanted. And took the lives of two people who did not deserve to be.
01:17:50
That they were friends with. That they acted like they were friends with. That were kind enough to take them into their home.
01:17:55
Yeah. Wow. It's really sad. Wow. That's a great story. Thank you. Okay. Should we read a couple fucking arrays?
01:18:02
Let's do it. You want to go first? This one says, I'm going to be on Jeopardy. It's been almost two years since I auditioned.
01:18:08
And to be selected is a pretty random stroke of luck. I don't feel very ready, but I'm listening to MFM as a break between intense studying and all my deep anxiety over being TV, being on TV, doing math on the spot, not fucking up answers and trying to learn literally everything in the world.
01:18:23
You guys remind me to be here for a good time, not a long time. Did we say that?
01:18:27
It sounds like Vince would say. And that, quote, who cares if it's perfect? Just do it.
01:18:33
Yeah. And I also need to go to San Kuchik and while I'm in L.A. Thank you for so many ways you've been here for me over the last four years.
01:18:40
And I hope I can share how much you mean to me on TV. Love, A. Congratulations. That's incredible.
01:18:47
What a feat. Do you know, that test is so hard. I know so many really, really smart people who have not gotten on that show.
01:18:54
This is called, this is from Bethany is killing it. And there are periods in the middle.
01:18:59
That's why I said it like that. My fucking area is that I was recently accepted into a highly competitive naval officer program.
01:19:05
I've been enlisted for almost 10 years and I never thought I'd be good enough to be an officer.
01:19:09
But after years of my husband and mentors pushing me, I put in a package and selected my first try.
01:19:15
Wow. I want to use my eventual leadership position to show young women and men in the military that they are capable of anything.
01:19:22
I've been through a lot of shit since I've been in, but I haven't let any of it keep me down.
01:19:26
And I want to show young sailors that women in leadership are just as capable as men.
01:19:31
Wow. Congratulations. No name. Bethany. She's killing it. Congratulations, Bethany.
01:19:37
That's amazing. Good work. This one says, being better than your parents. Oh, I see.
01:19:43
I missed the name. So this is from Trouble Cat on the fan cult. I just wanted to say fucking hooray to myself and all the other parents these days who are
01:19:52
teaching their children that even adults have to say sorry to children when they fuck up.
01:19:57
Best lesson I'm teaching my kids is mom is human and mom can say sorry when she hurts
01:20:03
your feelings. That's amazing. I love that. Well done. That's beautiful. This is Mine are from Instagram Oh hey it Kendall That who this is from My fucking array this week might not be super deep but I still incredibly proud of myself Tonight after months of student teaching I submitting my final project to obtain my official teaching license
01:20:24
I was always told that it was a waste of time and money to become an educator, especially a high school art teacher, due to society's lack of respect and poor pay.
01:20:32
Yet now more than ever, the world needs the language of art to remember what empathy, kindness and grace looks like.
01:20:38
Wow. This all starts with our youth who bring me so much joy and hope for a much brighter future than the world they are currently growing up in.
01:20:45
Wish me luck, SSTGM. Good luck. That's great. This one's great. It says, my fucking hooray.
01:20:52
Hi, MFM. I'm currently on my way home from a party where I met and chatted with the one and only Steve the Shemmy.
01:20:58
What? In parentheses, friend of the show. He unnecessarily began with. What? Hi, my name is Steve, as we shook hands, leading to a chummy joking exchange centered on coronavirus and the end of existence as we know it.
01:21:12
Fucking hooray for my first celebrity interaction and for my co-worker, Bill, whose February 29th leap day birthday party sparked the meeting.
01:21:20
Oh, my God. SST GM Savannah. Savannah. That is. I'm so jealous of you. My face is on fire right now.
01:21:28
It's the coolest. Of course, Steve Buscemi is the coolest. Of course he is. Introduces himself.
01:21:33
Steve. Hi, Steve. It's me, Steve. Steve! I'm kind of like an ex-fireman. Anyway, it's nice to meet you.
01:21:39
We're all going to die of coronavirus. I have one more. Tara Sem says, here's my fucking hooray.
01:21:44
I was recently on a slowdown over a mountain pass, but we were moving steadily. It was a gorgeous sunny yet snowy day.
01:21:50
We checked the Waze app to learn there had been an accident ahead, but it must have stalled traffic some time ago.
01:21:55
Because when the traffic started moving faster, we came upon snowmen. every few yards someone stalled in traffic had built us and had built a snowman on the shoulder
01:22:06
oh there were miles and miles of snowmen some had faces some had arms and some had boobs
01:22:12
fucking hooray so good every time someone went and then stopped they would build a snowman
01:22:18
so now now we're gonna do one boobs do it i love things like that because that's that's the like
01:22:24
effect the group think effect that's the positive right like oh they're doing it i want to do it
01:22:28
Yeah. Or they're like, I'm leaving this thing that someone else is going to laugh at that I'm not going to see the result of, but I'm doing it for someone else's joy.
01:22:36
Yeah. I love that. That's great. Yeah. What's yours? What's yours? Okay. Okay. Okay. This is from Georgia Hardstark.
01:22:45
Grade five. Just today, I was at home in our cute little house and I was working on my murder and Vince is on the other side of the couch packing merch for We Watch Wrestling.
01:22:57
And I just stopped and thought how fucking cool it is. It's the middle of the day.
01:23:02
And we're both working on projects that we love and that we're passionate about.
01:23:06
And how grateful I am that we get to live that life and that we're not working for the man.
01:23:14
We're doing these things that we care about and that mean a lot to us. And I didn't think that this was what being an adult got to be like.
01:23:23
And it just made me really happy to see that. And I made him stop and he went, uh-huh.
01:23:27
Yes, baby. Yeah, yeah. No, we're really lucky. I have to go to the, I have to go vote and I have to go to the post office.
01:23:34
And it's just nice. And that also means I think that my new meds are working. That you get to have a moment where you stop and have gratitude.
01:23:41
The fact that I did that is like not, yeah. That's great. Yeah. That's lovely. This fucking hurry brought to you by Quicken Loans.
01:23:50
That's what I thought we were like, not working for the man. And I'm like, we probably are working for a man in a lot of ways.
01:23:55
You're never not working for a man. But you know what's funny? I was going to do our, we had a fun, like a network party.
01:24:03
Because basically we've been working on this network for so long. And there's people, obviously all the podcasts that are on it currently.
01:24:08
But then there's a bunch that are coming. And lots of people waiting long, long, long time.
01:24:14
For their podcast to come out. But it was this really fun night And we it was one of those things where I was like we need to do a thing where we can just buy everybody a drink and everyone can be in the same room and we can all be like we doing a thing And then it just took on the life this life of its own And we
01:24:31
ended up just like we tried, we picked a place that was just super close to where we work. So
01:24:36
it'd be kind of convenient for everybody. And it ended up being that room. I'm not going to say
01:24:41
where it was because I don't want everybody else going there. But it was the most beautiful room
01:24:46
where we just thought it was just going to be like the side room at this restaurant or whatever.
01:24:52
So you're talking about the room itself. The room itself was so gorgeous that I was like, oh, this party's already a hit because we're in this space.
01:24:59
Because we look classy as fuck. For a long time, my career was a bunch of decisions that felt bad and wrong.
01:25:06
And I just did what I had to do, but I kept kind of trying to course correct the decision-making process.
01:25:12
So the next time I did something, you know, for a while, it was like, I have to do it for money because I'm in terrible financial strait.
01:25:19
But then once it was like, but I could still keep on trying to do additional things and just keep on kind of like taking swings and see if I could just get a hit, just get a hit, just get something going.
01:25:31
So to be standing in that gorgeous room with Danielle Kramer, who is, you know, amazing running our network and she's a master and all the people that we've been working with.
01:25:41
It was like a true joy. It was the coolest. Yeah. I was totally on that gratitude train myself.
01:25:48
I love it. It's very cool. Yeah. And the lasagna cupcakes from heirloom catering.
01:25:54
Oh, always a hit. It's always a hit. And guess what? We would not have that party and we would not have these moments and we would not have anything
01:26:02
if it were not for you guys, the murderinos and the listeners who have been there for
01:26:07
us and with us since day one. We are so fucking grateful for you guys. I can't believe it on a daily basis.
01:26:14
It's amazing. And we really thank you. And we really love you. And we're very proud of you.
01:26:19
Yeah. And we're very proud of ourselves. Yeah. We want to send it out into the airwaves.
01:26:25
I don't know. That you guys are. Georgia pointed to the ceiling. She did. We can't say it enough, though, because we really, you know.
01:26:35
Thank you, guys. You made it happen for us. You're making it happen for us. So thank you very much.
01:26:40
Thank you. Also stay sexy. And don't get murdered. Goodbye. Elvis, do you want a cookie?
01:26:46
Why is it always chaos when we link up? Because nobody plans anything, bro. Good thing the Rogue's ready like that.
01:26:52
For real. Rain, dirt, whatever. Available all-wheel drive. Five modes. We still outside.
01:26:58
And they got some kick too. That turbo? Torque is crazy. The most in its class. It moves, moves.
01:27:04
Rogue doesn't mess around. And peep the space. Merch on merch. Gear. Mikes. All of it fits.
01:27:10
Load up, we out. 2026 Nissan Rogue, built for all of it. Auto Pacific Segmentation, 2026 Rogue versus latest in-market competitors in the ex-SUV
01:27:20
mainstream mid-sides class, excluding electrical vehicles based on manufacturer websites.
01:27:26
This episode is brought to you in part by Vital Farms. Have you noticed that the egg section at the grocery store has gotten very complicated lately?
01:27:32
But Vital Farms makes it simple. Pasture-raised eggs, traceable to the farm. Their hens have outdoor access year-round with fresh air and sunshine,
01:27:40
and forage on rotated pastures with local grasses. Every carton can be traced back to the farm it came from
01:27:45
so you can see the pasture where the hens live by visiting vitalfarms.com slash farm.
01:27:50
Look for the black carton in the egg aisle and visit vitalfarms.com to learn more.
01:27:54
Vital Farms, good eggs, no shortcuts. Goodbye. Hey everyone, it's Kel Penn. I'm inviting you to join the best sounding book club
01:28:03
you've ever heard with my podcast, Earsay, the Audible and iHeart Audiobook Club.
01:28:08
every episode I nerd out with amazing guests and dive into the best new audiobooks available on
01:28:14
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on the iheart radio app or wherever you get your podcasts

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

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

Episode Highlights

  • My Favorite Murder's Charity Efforts
    The hosts celebrate selling out their charity pins and donating $10,000 to RAINN.
    “Thank you so much. We're so excited to be putting your money where we want to put it.”
    @ 02m 56s
    March 05, 2020
  • Sally Ride's Legacy
    Sally Ride was the first American woman in space, breaking barriers in science and exploration.
    “She is the first American woman.”
    @ 20m 18s
    March 05, 2020
  • Sally Ride's Legacy
    Sally Ride dedicated her life to encouraging students, especially girls, to study math and science.
    “She dedicates her life to encouraging students, especially girls, to study math and science.”
    @ 21m 45s
    March 05, 2020
  • The Challenger Disaster
    The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes just 73 seconds after liftoff, shocking the nation.
    “But just 73 seconds after liftoff, disaster strikes.”
    @ 27m 40s
    March 05, 2020
  • Investigation and Accountability
    The Rogers Commission finds NASA neglected warnings leading to the Challenger disaster.
    “The commission finds that NASA neglected to heed the very real and very important warnings.”
    @ 36m 34s
    March 05, 2020
  • The Corpsewood Manor Murders
    A chilling tale of two men who sought a peaceful life but met a tragic end.
    “This seems like the beginning of a horror movie.”
    @ 49m 23s
    March 05, 2020
  • Building Their Dream Home
    Dr. Scudder and Odom built their own castle in the woods, defying societal norms.
    “They built fucking a second floor.”
    @ 51m 35s
    March 05, 2020
  • Dr. Scudder's Eccentric Life
    A professor turned homesteader with a penchant for the macabre and the occult.
    “He was a card-carrying member of Anton LaVey's Church of Satan.”
    @ 55m 11s
    March 05, 2020
  • Avery Brock's Connection
    A local teen becomes intertwined with the lives of Scudder and Odom.
    “He thought that because Scudder and Odom lived this life that was so laid back...”
    @ 01h 01m 13s
    March 05, 2020
  • Media Circus and Rumors
    The aftermath of the murders spirals into sensationalism and unfounded rumors about the victims.
    “Local news reporters are more interested in the couple's issues than finding actual justice.”
    @ 01h 11m 33s
    March 05, 2020
  • The Killers' Fate
    Brock and West face justice for their heinous crimes, but the scars remain.
    “Eventually, West is found guilty of two counts of murder and sentenced to death.”
    @ 01h 13m 03s
    March 05, 2020
  • Celebrating Community
    A heartfelt thank you to listeners for their support and connection.
    “We are so fucking grateful for you guys.”
    @ 01h 26m 08s
    March 05, 2020

Episode Quotes

  • Your unfortunate, beautiful face.
    212 - Hot Money
  • Love or whatever.
    212 - Hot Money
  • Can you imagine the kids in her class back at home watching?
    212 - Hot Money
  • They fucking did it.
    212 - Hot Money
  • Oh my god, the murderers took anything of value they could find.
    212 - Hot Money
  • We're all going to die of coronavirus.
    212 - Hot Money

Key Moments

  • Chaos of Linking Up00:05
  • NASA Investigation36:05
  • Challenger Center39:53
  • New Beginnings49:27
  • A Dark Turn1:01:06
  • Legacy of the Murders1:13:27
  • Snowman Traffic1:21:59
  • Network Party1:24:03

Tension Over Time

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown