Strange Deranged Beyond Insane

Cosmic Threats and Chilling Revelations: Asteroids, Human Trafficking Scandals, and Kendrick Lamar's Cultural Commentary

Melissa

Could an asteroid slam into Earth by 2032, and are we prepared for such a cosmic event? Get the latest updates on the asteroid 2024 YR4 and its alarming trajectory. Meanwhile, we uncover the chilling human trafficking operation in Georgia, where Thai women were subjected to illegal egg harvesting. Amidst these serious topics, we can't ignore the curious whispers surrounding Jay-Z and Beyoncé's alleged surrogate farm and Google's eyebrow-raising move to rename the Gulf of Mexico. Plus, meet my lively 80-year-old barber client with a newfound appreciation for Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl performance, and who needs the lowdown on his beef with Drake.

What hidden messages lie beneath Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl halftime show? We dissect the performance, exploring its rich symbolism and cultural commentary. From Samuel L. Jackson's portrayal to costumes charged with political undertones, every element begs to be unraveled. Opinions on the show are split, yet its cultural footprint is undeniable. We reflect on its impact, drawing comparisons to halftime shows of the past and pondering its place in the annals of pop culture.

Get ready for a whirlwind of strange and sensational stories. Discover how the looming retail apocalypse might reshape the shopping landscape, with major stores bracing for closure. Dive into Jaguar Wright's intriguing tales about the music industry and the buzz around a vampire coven in Dayton, Ohio. We also venture into mysterious murders, eerie cemetery practices, and the unsettling case of the Idaho college killings. Join us as we unravel these enigmatic tales and invite you to share your thoughts and stories with us.

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Speaker 1:

Hey everyone, welcome back. It is your host, melissa at Strange During to be on Insane, alright, so I have some tea to spill again, like always. I want to, you know, inform everybody on the crazy news, like I love doing, alright? So, first and foremost, this is crazy, scary but exciting. So the big talk about an asteroid right now, right? So the chances of an asteroid striking Earth within the next decade has doubled in a matter of weeks, according to NASA astrometers, which is crazy, because we were just talking on Carissa's episode not too long ago about how the doomsday clock has sped up too. I mean pretty crazy, right? So the asteroid discovered just after Christmas and named 2024 YR4 could strike the planet in December 2032 as it approaches during another journey around its orbit, according to NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies. So this is real crazy news and it's not really talked about enough? I don't think so.

Speaker 1:

A horrific human trafficking operation has been exposed after three Thai women escaped a human egg farm in Georgia, where they were held captive, forcibly injected with hormones and had their eggs extracted for black market IVF sales. The victims, lured through fake surrogate job offers on Facebook, were promised $400,000 to $600,000 to carry children for childless couples. However, upon arrival, they were imprisoned with up to a hundred other women and subjected to sorry, you guys, I had a glitch there. So, as I was saying, they were subjected to non-consensual medical procedures. One survivor recounted. They took us to a house where there were 60 to 70 Thai women. There were no surrogacy contracts or parents. Women were injected with hormones, drugged up and their eggs extracted by machines every month. Many of the victims received no payment and those who tried to leave were forced to pay a ransom to buy their freedom. Holy fuck. The Pavina Foundation for Children and Women, working with Interpol and Thai authorities, rescued three women on January 30th After another victim bought her freedom and contacted Thai activist Pavina Hung Sakala. However, it remains unclear how many women are still imprisoned on the illegal farm. The foundation reports that 257 Thai women fell victim to human trafficking in 2024, with 204 taken abroad.

Speaker 1:

A live-streamed press conference showed the survivors wearing masks and protective clothing to conceal their identities, describing their ordeal Like how does this shit like not make like mainstream news? Like I'm sorry, I am so glad they brought TikTok back and we knew it wasn't gonna be banned. Um, but you see this shit on fucking TikTok and then you look it up on like, you actually have to cross check your facts and it always turns out to be true. However, the whole Jay-Z and Beyonce owning a surrogate farm I haven't really been able to back that up, but people are talking about it and I definitely would not. It would not shock me at all. I'm just going to say that. But, um, yeah, that's insane. However, I will say this and if fucking Facebook says you're going to get paid $400,000 to $600,000, it's a Facebook job like an ad. Never jump on it. I don't care if it's Facebook, ig, twitter X, youtube. I don't care who's selling you that. It's too good to be true, right? Twitter X, youtube. I don't care who's selling you that. It's too good to be true, right? Yeah, so anyways, all right. So this is. I mean, I don't fucking care, but I know people are like so either really excited about it or they're mad about it, which I don't know why you could be mad about it, but Google has officially changed the name to Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. It is true, if you look it up on your maps, it does show Gulf of America. Hey, I don't think it's a terrible thing. Like I said. I know a lot of people are not happy about it, but you know who gives a shit. All right, you guys. So before I get into the um, the halftime show for the Superbowl, I'm going to keep this as light and eerie as I can, because I could seriously talk circles about this shit. Um. So I want to add, before I get into the, kendrick Lamar and Drake feud and how this halftime show broke down with, you know, kendrick's performance. I do want to add again, you guys, I work at a barbershop, so mostly men and kids and we actually do have quite a bit of women clients too. But anyways, I cut. It was Thursday.

Speaker 1:

This like 80-year-old man, very good-looking man, very intelligent, still with it very much, you would never know he was 80. He goes honey. You know I was watching the halftime show Cause we were talking about the Superbowl, and he goes that Kendrick guy, or no, he said that Kendrick fellow. You know I, I really enjoyed his performance and I don't know why anybody bitched about it. Know I, I really enjoyed his performance and I don't know why anybody bitched about it. I was super entertained and I was like you, sir, are the best, like I honestly love you. This is great he's like but honey, can you explain to me you know he goes what you, you know what you kids, you know? He referred me as a kid, even though I'm 36, what this beef is between him and this Drake fellow. And I said, sir, I'm getting ready to do a little podcast episode, cause I have talked about this before on here, but I broke it down to him very lightly so I'm going to break it down to you guys.

Speaker 1:

Um, and I know most of you guys know, but I just kind of like want to put in some like key details, all right. So, okay, if you guys don't know, there is a really good documentary. It's called Kendrick versus Drake the feud, and I watched it on Hulu the other night. Actually, my husband was, he kept, you know, we have a real fireplace still and he was like adding wood into the fireplace, you know, coming in and out of the back room, and he was like watching it. And he was like adding wood into the fireplace, you know, coming in and out of the back room, and he was like watching it. And he he was like, wow, it's really interesting. And there's actually a lot of facts about Kendrick that I didn't know Like I didn't know that like he watched one of his neighbors be murdered and it like he had stuttering issues. He's he's actually married to his high school sweetheart. They have kids. Um, I never like kind of like like new details like that about him, but it is a really cool documentary. Um, highly recommend it if you guys have Hulu, all right. So let's get into the beef.

Speaker 1:

So the beef between Kendrick Lamar and Drake has been building since at least 2013 so over 10 years when Lamar made subliminal comments about Drake and his song Control. The feud has continued with songs like Push Ups, taylor Made, freestyle, euphoria and 616 in LA, all right. So in 2013, lamar made subliminal comments about Drake and his song. In 2015, lamar said that Drake had ghostwriters writing his raps I'm sorry. In 2023, J Cole said that Drake, lamar and he were the big three of rap music. But Lamar responded but it was just big me Now, right there with J Cole. Like I don't remember the J Cole, but I thought it was Big Sean, drake and Lamar. So I'm kind of still like trying to remember back.

Speaker 1:

And then, in 2025, drake filed a defamation suit against Universal Music Group over Lamar's song Not Like Us, and we all know the song, not Like Us, and I don't think he was supposed to perform it at the halftime show and he did anyways, which kudos to him, because he don't give a fuck about being sued, and to me that's a real person, right, nothing to hide. And then there's some other details, like Lamar has called Drake a rap colonizer who steals black culture slang and accents. We all know that Drake is a light skinned brother, right, he's mixed is a light-skinned brother. Right, he's mixed was on Degrassi. So you know, to me he has made a career for himself and I do like some of Drake's songs, but I will still see that boy from Degrassi that's soft. Like I don't know how he came out to be this like fucking gangster hood rapper. There's a lot of them that I don't understand. Lamar has also claimed that Drake is a pedophile and runs a sex trafficking operation. Drake has said that he could have taken Lamar's fans if he hadn't gone pop um, so those are just like a few details, but, like I said, you could talk circles with people and there's just so much more information.

Speaker 1:

All right, so let's decipher the Kendrick Lamar halftime show. All right, so it was essentially a 13-minute art piece filled with hidden messages that people were excited to learn about, right, and then they started to do a deep dive into these rabbit holes. Okay, all right. So Samuel L Jackson as Uncle Sam and Uncle Tom. So Samuel L Jackson, who introduced Kendrick while dressed like Uncle Sam, and the performance who kept telling Lamar how to act in order to play the game. He played a literal government figurehead there to try to stop Kendrick from spreading his messages, warning Kendrick about being too loud, too reckless, too ghetto. This is a major hallmark of classic Uncle Tom in literature. In fact, it's reminiscent of the character Stephen, another role in which Jackson famously depicts an Uncle Tom character.

Speaker 1:

I'm just kind of trying to do brief things. The Revolution's about to be televised. So, right at the top, lamar confronted America and told them it didn't matter what they thought of him or his performance. He was there to telephize the Revolution, saying the Revolution's about to be televised. You picked the right time, but the wrong guy, which I thought was really clever. That line was in reference to Gil Scott Heron's 1971 poem the revolution will not be televised, which is about how individuals are responsible for the change they want to see in the world, because the media will always ignore racism. However, what Lamar seems to be saying here is that the revolution is happening right now on the Super Bowl halftime stage and it's being televised.

Speaker 1:

So I do want to add, I wasn't even going to. Usually we have Super Bowl parties every year. Nobody was really excited about the Super Bowl because it seemed like a repeat. However, I have never watched a game on 4K, right. So my husband was in the basement hanging out watching it and I happened to put it on upstairs quite a little bit of time before the halftime show on 4K and I was like really impressed. I was like, holy shit, like this looks really cool on 4k. And I was like really impressed. I was like, holy shit, like this looks really cool.

Speaker 1:

Um, as soon as Kendrick came on, as much as I, I do like him. I don't like I'm not like obsessed with his music. I do like a lot of his songs and obviously I love SZA. Um, I do, really I like SZA more than Kendrick.

Speaker 1:

I will say that as soon as he came on and I started seeing all these hidden messages and like I felt really weird and I got, like this instant, really sharp headache and I just did not feel good at all, like I had made dinner. I made us like some really good um, like subs with with really good, you know, like, uh, it was like Romanian oh my God, not prosciutto, it was something else like that Um, but like really good meat. You know, boris head of course went all out and I made some like really good, like cheese fries, and I literally just could not eat. I lost my appetite because I was like, oh shit, I personally felt like something was going to go down at that Super Bowl. I'm just going to say that watching this. So, anyways, it was a little uneasy. I'm glad he did it, but there are like so many messages, so all the game, like.

Speaker 1:

So there were so many little callbacks to games and rules. First of all, lamar was performing at one of the biggest games of the year. Second, the stages on which he performed were shaped and arranged like buttons on a PlayStation controller and at the end of the performance, kendrick ended with the words game over. What does this all mean with the words game over? What does this all mean? Well, if you ask Shelly Rogers, a halftime show's art director who worked alongside Lamar to create his vision for the entire performance, rogers told Wired.

Speaker 1:

I think the video game theme was symbolic his way to reach young people. A lot of it is showing his journey, traveling through the American dream. All right, so the American flag? Lamar's all-black dancers wore red, white and blue costumes to form an American flag with a split down the middle. To me, this was about the absolute division-ness going on in America right now, with political lines being drawn, and that's kind of like where I started to really feel uncomfortable, knowing that Trump was there. I don't know, it just felt I don't want to say it felt wrong, it just felt uncomfortable.

Speaker 1:

But this person saying I know people are arguing that it's about how America was built on the back of slavery, which I think is also an accurate reading, especially after he wrapped 40 acres and mule this is bigger than the music. After he wrapped 40 acres and mule this is bigger than the music A reference to Union General William T Sherman's special field order number 15 that gave newly freed slaves Confederate land in the South. All right, so the costuming. What about Kendrick Lamar's outfit? Well, he was in a jacket that read Gloria, which is reference to his song with SZA. He also sported a chain featuring a lowercase a, which could not only be a reference to the A minor line from Not Like Us, but also to his company, pg Lang. Another idea I read about in light was from Newsbreak, which said that the outfits of the dancers signified gangs in America. We saw red as the bloods and blue as the crypts and white as the KKK. All right, so the duets Lamar performed, luther and all the stars with SZA, which marked a huge shift in tone from energetic and in-your-face to subdued and sexy, and it's exactly what Uncle Sam says America wants from him something nice and calm.

Speaker 1:

It's funny because the opinion is quite split on Lamar's halftime show. Some say it was boring, while others say it was one of the greatest of all times. I wouldn't say it was the greatest. I wish that there was other artists there too. I think the greatest was Dre and Eminem. That's my personal opinion, of course. With Mary J, I think it was really good. Do I think it was necessary? I don't know. I just find it funny that our President Trump was there. I just find it funny that our President Trump was there, but I loved him smiling and, you know, saying hi, drake.

Speaker 1:

All right, so the circle stage it's an interesting visual message All the lights was how the circular stage was built A staircase that led to a slope that brought the dancers all the way back, of how they started from the bottom. So this person's saying it's built like that for a reason. Maybe it's trying to communicate how marginalized groups, or even just the majority of the middle and low class in America, feel like they're working hard to make their lives better, all the while slowly descending back to where they started, from which I feel that Round and round they go the same efforts with the same results. And then, of course, you know, here we have it the Drake beef. The part of the performance was no doubt going to be the most popular, since it centered on his beef.

Speaker 1:

With Drake and the most famous song of the year they Not Like Us. Lamar teases the intro of the song by saying I want to perform their favorite song, but you know they love to sue In reference to Drake's lawsuit against Universal Music Group for promoting they Not Like Us. I got so excited. I mixed up my words because I laugh about this. Oh, this is great. So none of us really like, because I was messaging Kristen, aka Kiki, that's been on here and she said the same thing. She's like I didn't even fucking know that was Serena until they like broke it down. But also Serena Williams made a cameo, not only from Compton like him, that's where she's from but she also used she used to date Drake, so it was just like another layer of this and I just thought that was hilarious, but probably one of the most badass things that Lamar did.

Speaker 1:

Fans were wondering if he would call out Drake as hard as he did in the song and while some of the language had to be toned down for the performance, lamar looked right into the camera, smiled and said that line hey Drake, I hear you like I'm young, like damn, like burn. Like damn, like burn. So, um, I did enjoy the halftime show. I think there were so many messages, um, subliminal messages. I think people are going to take them the way that they want and there's going to be all these. I haven't. I've seen like a lot of different videos on social media, people saying what they thought, or you know the POVs and everything. I think it was really cool what he did. I definitely 1000% respect him for doing it. Again, it made me feel uncomfortable and I can't control feeling uncomfortable, right, you know, but you guys will have to let me know if you felt uncomfortable too, all right, so, on TikTok, kiki and I like to send all these videos to each other because we always have stuff to talk about, right.

Speaker 1:

And she, she kind of introduced me to Jaguar Wright. I don't remember her. Um, she was a singer, songwriter. Um, her full name is, I think, like Jacqueline yeah, jacqueline Suzette Wright. She's an American singer and songwriter. She has released five studio albums and is part of the okay player collective. Um, she's obviously been around for years and she has, like always has this hot tea to spill. I mean, she like she really digs in and gets into rabbit holes and talks like the Pete Diddy. You know all the freak off parties and everybody that was there. All the dirt on all these people Like she seems to have a lot of dirt and a lot of intuitive thoughts. Um, so, again, you guys, this is a legend, but supposedly Jaguar Wright says that Kendrick Lamar is the next to be sacrificed. I certainly hope that's not true. Um, so, yeah, so that is the talk about. You know this Kendrick and Drake stuff.

Speaker 1:

So, unfortunately, they are saying that there are a lot of major store closings in February of 2025. I know Big Lots right by my house is closing. If you guys are in the Sterling Heights area in Michigan, they have some, you know. I mean some of the shit there is not it's like picked over, but I got like a lot of like bathroom rugs and stuff, um for our main bath. So if you're interested and I know a lot of the big lots are closing, all right. So starting with so, Joanne Fabrics is closing over 500 stores this year. Jcpenney closing a handful of stores this year. Kohl's is closing dozens of stores this year, which is sad. Well, you know what? I would have been sad about this, like years ago, but Kohl's isn't as good as it used to be. I used to be able to go and like bank for buck at Kohl's for myself and my husband, okay. So GameStop is closing hundreds of stores stores this year, which is insane.

Speaker 1:

Because by a beauty supply place by my house that I go shop at, um, I went to go next door to GameStop. This was like a month and a half ago. I knew I'm like where's game? I'm like am I confused? Am I stupid? Um, where's GameStop? I'm like am I confused? Am I stupid? Where's GameStop? So when I went back in there I asked them I'm like, hey, what about GameStop? They're like girl. Like one night, like when we were getting ready to close, they all went in there like a slew of people and just fucking closed down the store and took everything out. And I'm like, oh my God. And I said, well, did they move like locations, like up the road or something? And they were like, I don't know, I think it's just gone. So to me that's crazy.

Speaker 1:

Advanced auto parts is closing 700 plus stores in the next few months, which is also crazy. Party city is closing 738 stories I'm sorry, stores this month. Big Lots is closing 601 stores this year. So Party City is going to be gone. Big Lots Walgreens is closing more than 500 stores more than 500 stores. Um, let's see, macy's is closing 66 stores in the next few months, which I feel like Macy's has been dying out for a long time now, if we're being honest, which is sad because I used to get all my dresses from Macy's. Um, 7-eleven is closing hundreds of locations this year, excuse me, which I find insane, because I mean 7-Eleven is closing hundreds of locations this year, which I find insane because I mean 7-Elevens are always busy, from what I see, at least in Michigan, family Dollar is closing 300 plus more stores this year, 15,000 total stores expected to close in 2025. Get ready so that, uh, I mean Walgreens, I mean there's so many like Walgreens, cvs, and that's stuff that you can get at your other general big stores. So, corporate America, you know the bigger stores are going to take over and the smaller ones are not going to succeed, unfortunately, and I think we're going to see a lot of this in the next upcoming years.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so I have talked on this show a couple times about this supposed vampire coven in Dayton Ohio and it's coming up again. Right, it's like filling media again. So there was a show, like a documentary, that was supposed to be aired on Netflix. It was all done, ready to go, had all this hype on it, and then they just fucking canceled it and like nothing was talked about and people were like pissed. They're like we want to see this documentary. Well, there are plenty of videos on TikTok. You can even look it up, you can cross check your facts.

Speaker 1:

Supposedly there is a huge vampire coven still active in Dayton Ohio. Um, more than New Orleans, I guess. Like bigger than that, like people are always saying like, oh, I'm safe if I'm in the Midwest, but sink again and get out your garlic cloves because supposedly there are vampires lurking and we are not far from Dayton Ohio, so that is equally scary. Um, I big into paranormal, big into the UFO, ets, vampires. I don't have any experience, nor do I want any experience, knowing that my ancestors are from Romania. Um, and I always joke, that's why I got pointy canines. I mean, maybe I'm a vampire, just kidding, I don't drink blood, I don't eat people or whatever. Maybe that's cannibalism, but it's anyways. The point of this is is that this whole vampire coven thing in Dayton Ohio is circling again, so it's making headlines, so maybe we will see that documentary sooner than we thought. Like I said, they completely wiped it out. They had all this hype about it and it goes back to a story, I think in the 1980s, late 80s, and I do have that on here Again on the podcast. This guy was playing this game and got obsessed with this character that was a vampire and he, like, basically possessed himself that he was this vampire and he went around and did some violent crimes. But there is a vampire coven in Dayton Ohio, so if you're anywhere around that area. Be careful.

Speaker 1:

All right, some fun, wicked, twisted facts about what causes someone to become a serial killer. Serial killers are made through a combination of genetics, brain abnormalities and life experiences. The serial killer brain Many serial killers have dysfunction in the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that controls impulses and decision making. The amygdala, which processes emotions like fear and empathy, is often smaller or less active in serial killers. Childhood trauma and abuse, neglect, physical abuse and extreme childhood trauma are common in serial killers' backgrounds. This warps their emotional development, making them detached from others. Pain. Many serial killers showed these behaviors in childhood animal cruelty, torturing or killing animals, which I grew up with a psychopath in the neighborhood.

Speaker 1:

So I gotta you know I always got to add my little touch here. Um, so I gotta you know I always gotta add my little touch here. Um, I'm you know I'm gonna say this because no one would know who this is. His name was Tommy and my pretty much my aunt and my uncle. Um, that I looked at like an aunt and uncle. They used to watch me sometimes.

Speaker 1:

Um, that lived about four streets down the way in the neighborhood from my parents' house. Anyways, um, tommy's parents were alcoholics. His dad used to beat the shit out of his mom all the time. Um, everyone knew Cops were over there all the time. His dad always got arrested, always came back home.

Speaker 1:

This boy was so demented he literally used to make shadow boxes of squirrels that he killed and would like, almost like, make them look like they were alive and like. He would make plays in these boxes and it was fucking frightening because we were so young. Um, so I do believe wherever he is in the world I don't believe that he lives there anymore, because I still live in this neighborhood. We just live on the other side I could totally see him being a serial killer. He was a psychopath when he was younger and he could not feel pain Like he's lit himself on fire. He would like fall on his bike so bad it would look like he broke his neck and he would just get back up and start riding Like it was incredibly terrifying. So, yes, kids that hurt animals and make things suffer. Yeah, I could totally see that Bedwetting past a normal age linked to extreme stress or trauma, fire setting a sign of a deep anger and lack of impulse control, genetics and Psychopathy.

Speaker 1:

Some serial killers are believed to inherit traits like a lack of empathy and impulsiveness. Not all psychopaths become killers, but many serial killers show psychopathic traits. Even if someone has all of these factors, a final triggering event like rejection, humiliation or extreme stress can push them into killing. Not all serial killers are the same, but most share brain dysfunction, trauma and a complete lack of empathy Crazy. So yeah, if you've ever experienced anyone around you with these traits, I would probably stay the fuck away. So here's a really uplifting, more fun fact Landlords can no longer ban pets, and that's a legal update which I think is amazing. Then that's a legal update which I think is amazing. That's great, all right.

Speaker 1:

So dumbest law in each state Kentucky, every citizen is required to take a shower at least once a year. Louisiana, it's illegal to send someone a surprise pizza, which I could kind of see that that could be threatening because there's a lot of weirdos out there. So I kind of agree with that. In Maine, it's illegal to keep Christmas decorations up after January 14th. Also, it is illegal here in Sterling Heights, michigan, because we got a violation for that and my husband had to fight it, which we thought was stupid. So we have obviously like a two-story house and he couldn't get up to the second story, because it was icy and snowy and, yeah, we got flagged for that one year, like when we first moved in. Okay, so Maryland, fortune telling is illegal. So excuse me, with my tarot reading, I would have been locked up several times. Excuse me, with my tarot reading, I would have been locked up several times.

Speaker 1:

Massachusetts it's illegal to scare a pigeon, sorry. Michigan it's illegal to tie an alligator to a fire hydrant. Minnesota it's illegal to have a contest where people try to catch a greased pig Super weird. Mississippi it's illegal to swear in public if two or more people are present. Missouri it's illegal to drive with an uncaged bear in your car. Montana it's illegal to give a rat as a gift. Nebraska it's illegal to get married if you have an STD. Nevada it's illegal to ride a camel on the highway. New Hampshire you cannot tap your feet or nod your head to music in a restaurant. What? I would have been arrested already. New Jersey it's illegal to wear a bulletproof vest while committing a crime. New Mexico Idiots cannot vote, hmm. New York it's illegal to take a selfie with a tiger. So one fun fact I want to add. This is in a state, but I just learned this.

Speaker 1:

I had to take one of the girl's clients the other night. She wasn't in and he's getting ready to go on a cruise with his family. I don't, I forget Dominican Republic. There's somewhere that they're going. They're like going to like three main places and in some of the other countries or whatever, when you get off it. So it's legal on the boat to wear what you want, like within reason. You can wear camo, whatever when you step foot off that boat. It is illegal to wear camo in some of these places as soon as you get off that boat, because only military can wear camo, any form of camo, and if seen with camo on off the boat you could be arrested immediately. He said that they like sent them these you know emails and it basically says make sure you read before you, you know, hop up, hop on board. So I thought that was pretty crazy, because I know a lot of people that have went on cruises and I've never heard that, so just wanted to share that with you guys.

Speaker 1:

So I was just telling Bridget, a girl that I work with today, how stupid this is. I'm sorry, but this was literally on Valentine's Day yesterday. This woman has both of her hands bitten off by a shark while trying to take a selfie with it. Like, how fucking stupid can you be? I'm sorry, but that was so stupid, for all my hands made tail lovers. Um, the show has teased an official season six that's coming out.

Speaker 1:

I do have a lot of catching up to do on this show. It is a very, very awesome, awesome, awesome thing to watch, very intense, all right. So I have spoken quite a few times about a lady on TikTok named Lottie Lux, and I really like a lot of her content because it's different. So she has this fact that she shared with everyone and it says Realizing that growing up in a dysfunctional family has made you so cortisol coated that you attract people who bring you dysfunction, and it's because you have an energetic imprint from the part I'm sorry, from that part of your life. So I found that very, very interesting.

Speaker 1:

Okay, you guys, so that the Idaho college murders that happened November 13th in 2022, that has never sat right with me and we've all been following this and I've been saying over and over like someone, it had to have been. Like an inside job in the house, whatever. Like you don't just one person fucking attack and knife people to death Like two guys, was it like three girls or something whatever. I think one of them survived, but I've it's been fishy for a long time. Okay, so now they're saying that in the Idaho four case, the other roommate was texting while the murders were going on. So I knew something was was off about the story since it get right and it kind of just like it's still lingering but it like kind of like died too, like they completely bulldozed that house down. It was just so eerie. Um, but now they're saying that Brian Koberger may walk free. So very interesting and uh, you know, if you guys kind of like forgot the details, um, even the details going down to the date and the time and the address of that house when it first happened, I remember like sending people a bunch of stuff about this and we were all like it just doesn't add up. Very, very, very eerie.

Speaker 1:

Okay, and last but not least, I know Carissa and I have talked, I know, multiple times on here about this because she's always found it interesting. The question always is have you ever seen a cemetery run out of room or have you? Have you ever seen a new cemetery being built? No, and that's because bodies on top of bodies on top of bodies. And, um, I actually just sent her this video the other night and she replied back with you only rent your burial site. And it's so crazy. And I said I remember you saying this, um, the same stuff in this video and talking about it on the podcast. And it's crazy to me how people spend all this fucking money.

Speaker 1:

But it and I guess in a way it makes sense, because eventually the family line like eyes off right and then by that time there's no family to come visit you and the bloodline is pretty much gone, if you will. So, yeah, just think about that. It's bodies on top of bodies, on top of bodies and carcasses and pretty much like cat, if you will. So, yeah, just think about that. It's bodies on top of bodies, on top of bodies and carcasses and pretty much like catacombs. So or they dig up the body, who knows what they do with the bones. But yeah, it's just, she asked me that years ago. She was like have you ever seen a cemetery run out of room A? Or have you ever seen a cemetery run out of room A? Or have you ever seen a cemetery being built? And when you ask yourself that question. It's pretty eerie, right? So you know just some fun stuff to put out there. But all right, you guys, I um again.

Speaker 1:

You know you can get ahold of us at ghost sisters 21, 24, at Gmail. You know, we want to hear from you guys, we want to hear your stories. Or, if you want us to tell your stories on here, you can find us on Twitter, youtube, facebook, tiktok Again, the email. You can also go on to Buzzsprout site and basically text message us. There is a link to message us and we will get it right away. All right, you guys, thanks for listening. Tune in for some more.

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