DISGRACELAND - Ariana Grande: Terror on Tour, Tragedy in Manchester, and Learning to Sing Again (REWIND)

Episode Date: May 17, 2026

On May 22, 2017, a terrorist detonated a bomb outside Ariana Grande’s performance at Manchester Arena. The blast killed 22 people. It injured over a thousand more. The attack remains one of the ...most heartbreaking events in music history. Parents were terrified. Younger fans suddenly feared going to concerts. But Manchester’s story doesn’t end on May 22, or in the days that followed. It ends with one woman organizing the One Love concert, healing a new generation of young pop devotees. This is the story of hope in the face of terror. This episode contains themes that may be disturbing to some listeners, including graphic depictions of violence. This episode was originally published on July 11, 2023. For the full list of contributors, visit disgracelandpod.com  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 This is exactly right. Elvis. Joy is essential and it's also elusive, but now there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence, Joy 101. It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotbi. If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats. Open your free IHeart Radio app.
Starting point is 00:00:36 Search Joy 101 and listen now. Joy 101 with HodaCat. Potby is presented by CVS. Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHart Podcast presents soccer moms. So I'm Leanne. Yeah. This is my best friend, Janet. Hey.
Starting point is 00:00:50 And we have been joined at the hips since high school. Absolutely. A redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the hip. Just a little bit bigger hips. This is a podcast. We're recording it as we tailgate our youth soccer games in the back of my Honda Odyssey. With all the snacks and drinks. Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
Starting point is 00:01:08 Oh, they had a bogo. Well, then you got it. Listen to soccer moms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. How much you wait, Wanda? Right now, I'm about 130. I'm at 183. We should race. No, I want to leave here with my original hips. On the podcast, The Matchup with Alia, I pair prominent female athletes with unexpected guests.
Starting point is 00:01:27 On a recent episode, I sat down with undisputed boxing champ, Clarissa Shields, and comedian Wanda Sykes to talk about Wanda's new movie, Undercard, the art of trash talk, and what it really means to be ladylike. Open your free IHeart Radio app. Search the matchup with the Leia and listen now. Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports Network. What's up, guys? So recent listeners of Disgraceland, you might recognize a scene from this Ariana Grande,
Starting point is 00:01:54 rewind episode that you're about to hear. The tragedy at the Eagles of Death Metal Show at Bada Clan are depicted, and we use that audio scene in our recent Foo Fighters episode because, well, as you may have heard, that show, that Eagles of Death Medal show, and the tragedy that happened there that had a lot to do with our theory on the reason why Taylor Hawkins's cause of death has still not been made public. So Taylor Hawkins, foo fighters, Eagles of Death Medal, Ariana Grande? Yes, it's all connected. Music history is a tangled, sometimes very dark web. And the tragedy that took place in Manchester at the Ariana Grande show
Starting point is 00:02:38 in 2017. That happened almost 10 years ago. That's hard to believe. A lot of this happened to Ariana Grande since then. She's been deemed by Time Magazine for a second time to be one of the most influential people on the planet. In 2020, she was the highest paid female musician in the world, which is saying something, considering that Taylor Swift was making music that year as well. Ariana Grande, of course, went on to star in Wicked and get nominated for an Academy Award. too many things have happened to mention. A lot. Ariana Grande has turned herself
Starting point is 00:03:11 into one of the biggest stars on the planet. And that nearly never happened given the psychotic designs of a mad, bombing lunatic who targeted one of her concerts back in 2017. And this is the story of how it all went down. I hope you guys dig it.
Starting point is 00:03:27 This episode contains content that may be disturbing to some listeners. Please check the show notes for more information. is a production of Double Elvis. The story about Ariana Grande is insane. A terrorist detonated a bomb outside her performance at Manchester Arena. The blast killed 22 people. It injured over a thousand more.
Starting point is 00:04:01 The event remains one of the deadliest attacks in England's history. It terrified parents, made young fans scared to enjoy live music. So Ariana brought them together again, showed them there was nothing to fear. She gathered 55,000 people and raised over $23 million for victims of the attack in their families. She raised that money with the power of great music. Unlike that clip I played for you at the top of the show, that wasn't great music. That was a preset loop from my Melotron called St. Vitus Dance Joyride, MK2. I played you that loop because I can't afford the rights to I'm the One by DJ Khalid,
Starting point is 00:04:43 featuring Justin Bieber, Cuavo, Loane, and Chance the Rapper. And why would I play you that specific slice of self-congratulatory we the best cheese could I afford it? Because that was the number one song in America on May 22, 2017. And that was the day that Ariana Grande's Dangerous Woman Tour became lethal. On this episode, Terror on Tour, Tragedy in Manchester, the tenacity of one city in Ariana Grande. I'm Jake Brennan, and this is disgrace land.
Starting point is 00:05:48 In the beginning, there was only music, a kick drum pounding to the rhythm of heartbeat, voices in the crowd shouting along with the band, guitar riffs ricocheting off the walls of the club, total harmony. But then some new sounds entered the concert, loud, rapid ones. They ricocheted off the walls just the same.
Starting point is 00:06:08 And then they pierced through flesh, not music. Terrorists tore through the Bataclan Theater in Paris without a second thought. Three gunmen, three reloads each, maybe four. Three minutes of a police assault. Ten hours of sorting through dead bodies. And in the end, there was no music, just silence. The Eagles of Death Metal concert ended too early on November 13, 2015. An attack during the show claimed the lives of 90 fans.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Paris burned with fear, grief, exasperation. Concerts were supposed to be safe, sacred, a place to leave all that other shit at the door. Everyone followed a set of unspoken rules. Dance your heart out, mosh, even, but don't put anyone in danger. Support each other's backs as they crowd-surfed over your head. Watch your friends' drinks whenever possible. Bottom line, protect your fellow fans. People followed those rules most of the time, but every once in a while, someone shattered that sense of safety for everyone.
Starting point is 00:07:18 The damage went beyond egos of death metal fans and beyond Paris. Suddenly, concerts didn't feel the same anywhere. Ticket holders were weary, and parents were petrified to send their kids out to the show alone. There was a big bad world out there, and there was no telling if or when tragedy would strike again. She wanted to look bad, like the good kind of bad, the sexy kind of dangerous, just like Ariana Grande and latex on the cover of her new album, Dangerous Woman. She looked at the clothes heaped on her pink bedspread. Cat ears, check, black miniskirt, check, thigh-high boots, check.
Starting point is 00:07:59 But she'd have to be sneaky about wearing them if she didn't want her parents to confiscate them again. Maybe she could cram them into her purse and chained shoes at the show. Yeah, that would work. She couldn't risk it and busted. She needed those boots to complete the outfit, and she didn't have much time left to prepare. It was only five hours until tomorrow, 20 hours until school let out,
Starting point is 00:08:20 24 hours until she stepped into the Manchester Arena on her own, 24 hours until she saw Ariana Grande in the flesh. The mere thought made her knees weak. Everyone at school had their pop star, the singer who dictated what they wore and how they spoke and how they looked at life. Some of the girls like Katie Perry and Taylor Swift, the rebellious ones opted for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus.
Starting point is 00:08:46 But Ariana Grande was her girl. She could rattle off any and every fact about Ariana without a moment's thought, like she was reciting stats from a baseball card or paragraphs from a Wikipedia entry. Ariana Grande was born in 1993 in Boca Raton, broken to Broadway at just 15 years old, secured her spot as a Nickelodeon star at 60.
Starting point is 00:09:07 signed with Republic Records at 17 and dropped the debut album before she turned 21. Ariana had eight Billboard Top Ten singles, three albums, and a shelf full of IHeart Radio and American Music Awards. The girl read every interview Ariana gave, watched every music video dozens of times to spike those YouTube viewership numbers. She was in it for the long haul, ever since the day she saw Ariana on the Nickelodeon show, Victorious. In the early 2010s, Ariana Grande played a character. on TV named Cat Valentine, hapless sidekick to lead actress Victoria Justice. Cat was cute, dumb, simple. She was a redhead, which meant Ariana damaged her brown hair with dye and bleach.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Once victorious folded, Nickelodeon kept Cat alive for a new show called Sam and Cat. They buried Ariana behind more dumb moments and then tossed the show and Ariana aside after one season. They saw her as a secondary character and nothing more. Big mistake. Ariana knew she had the pipes to shatter the glass ceilings that kept teenage girls in dumb demura roles. So she did the 21st century thing. She uploaded covers to YouTube until they caught the attention of Republic Records.
Starting point is 00:10:23 Before long, she locked herself into a management contract with Scooter Braun as well. Scooter Braun had the power to make or break any artist. Case in point, he made Justin Bieber's career, and someday he'd break Taylor Swift's heart in prison. purchase her master's. Scooter was the shrewdest manager in the modern music biz, for better or for worse. He could smell a hitmaker and a moneymaker from a mile away. When he heard Ariana cover Bieber's song Die in Your Arms on her YouTube channel,
Starting point is 00:10:53 he went all in. Republic Records and Scooter Braun saw something in Ariana Grande that other industry executives couldn't. There was a towering four-octive diva crammed inside of that five-foot-three young girl. She just had a break free. Ariana had been trying to break free for years. She told her management she wanted to record a mature R&B album when she was only 14, and they laughed her off. No one would want that kind of music from a kid who couldn't even drive you.
Starting point is 00:11:23 And her management nudged her towards Nickelodeon instead, said it was more age-appropriate. So Ariana waited. Paid her dues on television until Republic and Scooter Braun snapped her up. She kept it cutesy with her first hit, a collaboration with her boyfriend, Mac Miller, called The Way. She maintained a reputation as squeaky clean as the whistle notes that she hit with her four-octo vocal range. Ariana's innocent persona stuck around for two album cycles.
Starting point is 00:11:50 But when she became known as Ariana the pop star and not Ariana the Nickelodeon star, she slipped into that latex and she never looked back. She had waited long enough for this. Ariana didn't have to act sexy to chart. She can move records dressed like a child star. She started embracing her sex appeal because she wanted to, plain and simple. She pulled bunny ears and a catwoman mask over her signature ponytail, started singing less about crushes and more about mixing boys and bad decisions.
Starting point is 00:12:20 Her new album, Dangerous Woman, went places her old material wouldn't dream of. The kind of music you had to whisper about in school so the teachers couldn't hear you. All the kids thought they knew what her song side to side meant, but no one had the guts to ask. If you admitted you didn't know, the other kids in class braided to a virgin, or a dumbass. It may be both. Better to just act like you understood why Ariana said she couldn't walk right after seeing her boyfriend. It was clear that Ariana Grande was all grown up now, and so was her number one fan in Manchester. Well, the girl pretended to be at least.
Starting point is 00:12:57 Sometimes when her parents were asleep, she'd wear those thigh-high boots and take long, sexy steps like she was on a catwalk. Ariana's new music made her feel like she was 10 years older. She didn't really know what it felt like to be a dangerous woman or a woman in general, but Ariana's music gave her an idea. She would officially learn what it meant tomorrow night at the concert, it was time to step into the next phase of her life. She wasn't just attending a performance by her hero. This was the first time her parents were letting her go to a show without them.
Starting point is 00:13:30 She felt so giddy she could squeal. But squealing was for her lame tweens. She was a teenager now, sophisticated enough to go out on her own. All she needed was her mom to drop her off tomorrow night. Not right in front of the Manchester Arena, no, that'd be too embarrassing. She'd make her grand entrance on her own, and then step into the arena and shell out however many pounds it cost to take home every shirt, hoodie, and accessory at the merch stand that she could afford.
Starting point is 00:13:56 Who even knew what would come next? She kept off Twitter these days to avoid spoiling any surprises about Ariana's current tour and set list. But no matter what happened, she knew one thing for sure. She would never be the same. Pride is like love. You feel it in your heart. IR. Radio. Canada's number one streaming app for radio and podcasts,
Starting point is 00:14:38 including IHart Pride Canada, your favorite hits and must have party bangers, plus personalized and curated playlists. Like back in the day pride. Come together, celebrate love. Take pride with you anytime, anywhere. Just ask your smart speaker. to play IHeart Pride Canada.
Starting point is 00:14:56 Stream us on your phone. Listen now at iHeartRadio.ca. Your husband is not who you think he is. Your body is not what you saw it was. Your identity is formed by a secret history. I'm Danny Shapiro. And these are just a few of the stunning stories I'll be exploring on the 14th season of family secrets.
Starting point is 00:15:16 And just then, we felt the plain turn in the air. So much so that the bags that were under people's seats just kind of flew into the aisle. Each week, we dive headfirst into the complex power of secrecy, how it shapes our identities and relationships, and how it ultimately can reveal to us our truest selves. My daughter, she's pretending she doesn't know, but is trying to cook and feed me and keep me alive
Starting point is 00:15:41 because I wasn't eating anything, and me pretending like everything was fine. He kind of shoved me out of the way and said, move. And he went out the front door, and he jumped in a car and drove off, and that was the last time I saw him. Listen to Season 14 of Family Secrets on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Will Ferrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcasts presents Soccer moms.
Starting point is 00:16:05 So I'm Leanne. Yeah. This is my best friend, Janet. Hey. And we have been joined at the hips since high school. Absolutely. A redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the hip. Just a little bit bigger hips.
Starting point is 00:16:15 This is a podcast. We're recording it as we tailgate our youth soccer games in the back of my Honda Odyssey. with all the snacks and drinks. Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer? They had a bogo. Well, then you got it. Listen to soccer moms on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:16:33 He would have blended in perfectly if he wasn't fidgeting so much. The stranger kept rubbing his hands together or scratching his neck, everything except looking around the room for someone. He perched here a set of stairs in the foyer of the Manchester Arena. The city room, as it was known, a regular room. He was just sitting there, conveniently hidden from the CCTV cameras. Not texting anyone, not killing time with a book, not touching his massive backpack. Lingeringering wasn't a crime.
Starting point is 00:17:07 Lots of people hung around the city room, waiting for friends and loved ones to emerge from nearby Victoria Station. On May 22, 2017, parents were scattered around the foyer, killing time as they waited for their kids to burst out of the arena, riding the youthful high of an Ariana Grande concert. But this one guy felt different. Maybe he wasn't waiting for someone. Maybe he was waiting for something to happen. Maybe he was waiting for the right moment. A suspicious dad tapped a security guard in the city room.
Starting point is 00:17:39 That man on the stairs was fidgeting and sweating far too much for his liking. The guard glanced casually over his shoulder. The strange man dressed to blend in. Black Hollister vest, black jeans, brown ball cap. He was so unremarkable that he nearly faded into the background, like he was just part of the scenery. But the concerned dad was right. The man radiated weird vibes. He gave the security guard an uneasy feeling that he couldn't put his finger on. And that wasn't even the whole picture. The security team didn't know that this man had lingered around the arena for almost two hours. Security wasn't paying attention. Two of the guards slipped out that night for a two-hour dinner. Another two took their break in tandem and left the city room on patrol. for nearly 45 minutes.
Starting point is 00:18:23 They even passed this suspicious man on his way into the city room as they were leaving it. The city room was never supposed to go without supervision, especially on the night of a concert teeming with vulnerable teenage girls. But the security team didn't follow the rules tonight. They relax, and this weirdo slipped right through the cracks. Nagging feelings tugged the guard back and forth. One instinct told him that something was off with this guy. The stranger didn't sit right with him, literally.
Starting point is 00:18:56 I mean, who fidgeted that much? Why not just take a lap and walk it off, dude, or check Instagram for God's sakes? No, wait. Owning a backpack was illegal. So was milling around in a public space. What, you're going to get this guy in trouble for just sitting there and looking sweaty? Now the guard was sweating too. He had to do something.
Starting point is 00:19:17 He grabbed his radio and tried to connect with the control room. No dice. The channels buzzed with excessive traffic. He tried again and again and again, nothing. Sudden chatter broke his focus. Young girl started streaming into the city room from the arena, singing and squealing over each other. The show was over, time to move on.
Starting point is 00:19:40 The guard moved his post outside. The suspicious man noticed the crowd too. He walked down the stairs to the center of the city room at 10.30 p.m. Now he was on his phone, smiling. There were no guards around to ask what he was doing. No one to stop him from doing what came next. The girl's heart thudded louder than it ever had before. Balloons rained from the ceiling as Ariana Grande's final high notes soared to the rafters.
Starting point is 00:20:11 Ariana tore to Dangerous Woman for the finale. Her number one fan watched from her seat in the balcony wearing those thigh-high boots. She clicked her heels on the floor to the beat. She loved the way the music made her feel. It was the perfect ending for the perfect night, everything she could have wanted and so much more. She had new memories, new tour shirts she held to her chest like treasure, and new girlfriends who worshipped the same idol that she did. They lent each other their hair ties and swapped dance moves like sisters. Sweat glistened in their hair and clunked their cat-eared headbands.
Starting point is 00:20:46 The concert was one giant baptism and the sweat was the holy water. They were adults now, cool enough to hang on their own. Her heart sank as it hammered in her chest. They'd have to pry her from her seat. She never wanted to leave this very spot. She wanted to live in this giddy, flawless moment forever. Then she heard it. A blast, loud as fuck.
Starting point is 00:21:13 Was that part of the show? The sound froze people in their steps, and the arena went silent for a few seconds. Fans waited for something else to have. and another sound to help glue them in. Instead, a gush of hot air swept across the arena. It stung the girl's eyes and blew the bangs off her forehead. White smoke poured in first and then came the smell.
Starting point is 00:21:35 Sulfur, fireworks, danger, run. The screams started and never stopped. Fans rushed to the exits even though they didn't know which ones led to safety. No one knew what was happening, period. Theories spread to the crowd like a nasty rumor. some harmless, some atrocious. The bang was a balloon popping, a loudspeaker failing, a train that crashed into Victoria's station,
Starting point is 00:21:59 an active shooter on the loose. No one knew the truth, that a terrorist detonated a bomb in the city room. A voice came over the loudspeaker with an eerie sense of calm. Ladies and gentlemen, please take your time. There was no need to bunch up. The chaos unraveling around the girl said otherwise. The force of the crowd knocked some fans over and swept them under a stampede of footsteps.
Starting point is 00:22:25 People vaulted over staircase railings to cut in front of each other. A throng of fans absorbed her and pushed her into a hallway. But they were moving too slowly. She forced her way out to the front of the mob and sprinted ahead. She was alone now. No parents. No friends. Her feet couldn't carry her fast enough.
Starting point is 00:22:43 She nearly fell over in her boots. Damn these heels. She kept her head straight as details whizzed by her. People strewn across the floor, some in pools of blood, some being loaded on the makeshift stretchers. Their skin glistening with massive dots. She couldn't tell what the dots were as she didn't want to know. Her heart thudded in a different way now. Shaky, rapid beats terror pumping through her body.
Starting point is 00:23:06 The excitement of the night was gone. There was only fear now. She tuned out the screams, the cries of mothers being separated from their children. The whales of her new sisters lying helpless on the floor, than the useless message over the intercom. She filtered it all out and focused on her boots clacking on the tile. Each click was another step towards safety, wherever that was. Blood streaked the floor underneath her feet.
Starting point is 00:23:31 One of her heels sunk into the tender flesh of someone's hand. Her stomach twisted with guilt, but she couldn't stop. She had to go, go, go, go, get the hell away from here. Her treasure trove of T-shirts and merch was gone now. She didn't even know when she dropped it all. She didn't care. Her cat ears slipped down under her face as she ran. She tore them off and tossed them aside without hesitation.
Starting point is 00:23:53 A team of stewards banded together to form a human wall to keep guests away from the worst of the smoke. She sprinted away from them and into the city room. More blood on the floor. More people covered in those dots. She spotted a clump of flesh from the corner of her eye. Oh my God, a leg! That was a human fucking leg! Tears were running down her face.
Starting point is 00:24:13 She wanted to rewind. She wanted to go home. She wanted to bury herself under her. a pile of blankets and forget that she ever came here, that she ever wanted to come here, that she was ever so stupid to leave the house alone. Her mouth opened and she couldn't stop what came next. She was screaming, shrieking, louder than she ever had in her life. She ran faster than she ever thought was possible. Someone somewhere didn't have a leg and couldn't run away. So she had to run twice as hard. For both of them, she needed to live. Someone needed to make it out of this
Starting point is 00:24:43 nightmare alive. She burst through the doors of Manchester. her arena, police lined the streets. They yelled to the crowd, run, run, keep on running. And that's exactly what she did. She ran until one of the heels buckled under the pressure. She ran until she couldn't breathe. She ran until she couldn't see the arena for the swarms of police cars or any proof of that hellscape so she can maybe, just maybe, pretend that it never happened. We'll be right back after this word, word, word. month Toronto. Pride is an opportunity for you to create your own space, to celebrate your existence. Iheart Radio is proud to be an official sponsor of Pride Toronto Festival and we won't stop.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Celebrate Pride. Turn up the love and listen to IHeart Pride Canada. Your 24-7 radio stream and the only playlist you need for your Toronto Pride celebrations. Pride is so great because it gives a whole bunch of people this visibility that they've never had before. We have a ton to celebrate Toronto. Happy Pride. IHeart Radio. Your husband is not who you think he is. Your body is not what you saw it was. Your identity is formed by a secret history. I'm Danny Shapiro, and these are just a few of the stunning stories I'll be exploring on the 14th season of Family Secrets.
Starting point is 00:26:10 And just then, we felt the plain turn in the air, so much so that the bags that were under people's seats just kind of flew into the aisle. Each week, we dive head first into the complex power of secret. how it shapes our identities and relationships, and how it ultimately can reveal to us our truest selves. My daughter, she's pretending she doesn't know, but is trying to cook and feed me and keep me alive because I wasn't eating anything,
Starting point is 00:26:37 and me pretending like everything was fine. He kind of shoved me out of the way and said, move, and he went out the front door and he jumped in a car and drove off, and that was the last time I saw him. Listen to Season 14 of Family Secrets on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your... podcasts. How much you wait, Wanda? Right now, about 130. I'm at 183. We should race. No, I want to leave here with my original hips. On the podcast, The Matchup with Alia, I pair prominent female athletes
Starting point is 00:27:05 with unexpected guests. On a recent episode, I sat down with undisputed boxing champ, Coraes, and comedian Wanda Sykes to talk about Wanda's new movie Undercard, the art of trash talk, and what it really means to be ladylike. Open your free I-HeartRadio app. Search the Matchup with Alia and listen now. Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of I Heart Women's Sports Network. Manchester stood in pieces. The city split into fragments. Police cordoned off sections of town with caution tape.
Starting point is 00:27:37 Streets turned gray, void of life and energy. Small patches of color around town attempted to revive morale, vibrant bouquets, well-loved, stuffed animals, and bundles of pink balloons. Yellow tape circled Manchester Arena. The scene inside the city room told the story of the attack. The air, screws penetrated metal doors, deep scuffs marred brick walls. The arena would lay dormant for months, silent like the rest of the city.
Starting point is 00:28:07 On May 23rd, 2017, the day after the attack, a hush settled in Manchester. People tried not to cry. They muted the news. They stopped conversations mid-sentence. At Buckingham Palace, the Queen observed a minute of silence for the victims of the tragedy at the arena. They had a label for it by now. After a night of chaos and confusion, they knew it was a suicide bombing. The bomb projected 3,000 nuts and screws across the city room. The shrapnel cut open limbs, necks, and chests.
Starting point is 00:28:42 It was powerful enough to kill anyone in a 20-meter radius. Some people were only standing two meters away when it detonated. Experts said the force was like being shot point-blank 20-plus times. There were 358 people in the city room when the terrorist detonated the bomb. 60 ambulances rushed victims to the hospital that night. First, the number of injured people was given us 59. Then it grew to 116, and it would eventually mushroom to over a thousand. Three fans succumbed to their wounds in the hospital.
Starting point is 00:29:15 19 died at the scene. Police identified each one with fingerprints and dental records. The Queen's minute of silence was barely enough. time to read every name of the deceased victims. But today, it was all the time that the English authorities could spare. The country was on high alert. The government mobilized nearly a thousand soldiers to patrol London. It would be no tours of the Palace of Westminster or Buckingham Palace today. The changing of the guard ceremony was cancelled so officers could be redeployed. Leagues of soldiers stood guard outside major tourist attractions. Other officers patrolled the streets of Manchester
Starting point is 00:29:52 guns in hand. Everyone else pieced together the country's biggest investigation. The officer saw the minute hand lurched forward on his watch. The queen's moment of silence was over, back to work. He sighed and poured himself another cup of coffee. That minute was the most rest he'd had all day. He plunked down at his desk and rubbed his face. He took a deep breath and flipped open the file on his desk. Again, Salman of Baby, aged. 22, born and raised in Manchester. Police at the scene found him in bloody pieces scattered across the city room. He was so mangled that officers needed a bank card in his pocket to identify him.
Starting point is 00:30:37 Facial recognition confirmed it. A beady was the culprit. The British government had been aware of him for years. The call started in 2011. People who had brushed shoulders with Abadi, dialed England's anti-terrorism hotline to report him, Said his extremist views were worrisome. The Domestic Intelligence Agency M-15 were even aware of Abadi before the attack. They never thought he warranted immediate action, though.
Starting point is 00:31:04 And now, it was too late. Officers had to work backwards, retrace every connection, every relationship, every tip overseas. ISIS formerly claimed responsibility for the bombing, but there were still gaping holes in the investigation. The police didn't know how many people had helped move this scheme along, and they didn't know if those people were in England right now. The officer was one of roughly a thousand others working around the clock to find answers. He ran over the timeline again. A Beatty was born in Manchester in 1994 to Libyan immigrant parents. He attended the Bernage Academy for boys.
Starting point is 00:31:44 Then Manchester College between 2011 and 2013. That's when the calls to the anti-terrorist line started. He visited Libya before enrolling itself for university to study business and management. And that part was key. The government granted him 7,000 pounds for student loans before he dropped out of school later that year. 7,000 pounds could buy a lot of different things, like plane tickets, batteries, and burner phones. Bedi went to Libya one final time in mid-April. That's when he connected with members of an Islamic State unit.
Starting point is 00:32:19 The same unit involved with the Bataclan Theater attack in Paris. When Abedi returned on May 18th, he had a plan. Who's going to hit the United Kingdom where it hurt, right at the doors of its largest indoor arena? Records show that he withdrew money from a bank account he hadn't touched in a year. Then he bought materials, a backpack, nuts, and screws, a lead acid battery. With the right training, experts said he could have built a bomb in just 24 hours. A Beatty made his final arrangements. He wired his brother, 2,500 pounds.
Starting point is 00:32:54 He placed the bomb in his new backpack and strolled into the city room in the Manchester Arena. He dawdled there for two hours before it was time. A baitie called his mother 15 minutes before he detonated the bomb. He asked her to forgive him for anything he had done wrong. And then, he hung up. No one would forgive him anytime soon. They would overcome him instead. Salman Abadi was dead, of course. His bomb tore his torso to shreds, catapulted it across the room.
Starting point is 00:33:28 Authorities arrested his brother in South Manchester shortly thereafter. That was one lead. But the number of possible connections felt endless. There were 3,000 lines of inquiry within the counterterrorism control room. Police searched dozens of houses, arrested innocent men, and questioned them for hours just to be safe. But there were still so many ifs. so many missing details. Details that might never truly be uncovered. The officer tossed the file onto his desk. England's terrorism threat level rose to critical today.
Starting point is 00:34:03 He'd do anything to lower it, to tell people that everything would be all right, to uncover some smoking gun that would put people at ease. The officer was unsure what a discovery like that would even look like. He was unsure it even existed. But the people of Manchester needed something to heal them. and they needed it immediately. It could happen again. Everyone was thinking it, but no one wanted to say it out loud,
Starting point is 00:34:50 not on an occasion like this. Today was supposed to be about healing, strength, unity. Today was all love. One love, Manchester, called. Ariana Grande's benefit concert scheduled for this afternoon, June 4th, 2017, just two weeks after the attack at the Manchester Arena. One day earlier, terror struck England again. London Bridge this time. They plowed down a line of pedestrians with a ban, and they stabbed the survivors in the street. Eight more deaths, 48 more injuries. The crime scene at London Bridge was
Starting point is 00:35:28 still fresh when 55,000 fans filed into the old Trafford cricket ground for Ariana's benefit show. Eyes darted around the stadium. Anxiety vibrated through the crowd, especially in the very front. It felt like deja vu. A pack stadium, a sea of cat ears. Young girls pressed shoulder to shoulder in oversized sweatshirts. Her body knew she had been here before. Nearly two weeks ago, she was sprinting away from an event just like this.
Starting point is 00:36:00 She swore she'd never go back to such a place, never walk alone, never trust the strange faces in a large crowd, never let loose, not even a little. She didn't even want to speak anymore. She worried that if she opened her mouth again, she'd start screaming and never be able to stop. But here she was, one girl in a crowd of 55,000 people, nearly four times the size of the last show. She huddled with a pack of 14,000 fans from the original Manchester concert. Ariana treated them to complimentary tickets at the foot of the stage. The 40,000 remaining tickets sold out in six minutes.
Starting point is 00:36:38 One Love Manchester was the event of the year. But the girl still wasn't sure that she wanted to be here. She ranked the artist on the lineup in her head as a distraction. She had to see Katie Perry and Miley Cyrus, obviously. Justin Bieber and Nile Horan were up there too. There was some guy named Liam Gallagher, who apparently was a big deal, but she could take her leave his set. Then there was cold play, Usher.
Starting point is 00:37:03 Crap, who else? The distraction wasn't working. Her heart rammed into her rib cage, just like it did when she'd heard that bang two weeks ago when she threw herself down the Manchester Arena hallway, threw the smell of sulfur and passed the trails of blood on the tile floor. The image wouldn't leave her mind. She was supposed to be safe here,
Starting point is 00:37:22 but she was supposed to be safe at Manchester Arena too. Her heartbeat was all she could hear anymore. It made her feel sick, disgusted, feelings far too mature for a teenager. The sound was a nagging, constant reminder of what she lived through. It made her crazy. It made her. Pop music suddenly poured from the stadium speakers. Notes the song she knew inside out and backwards,
Starting point is 00:37:48 which she danced to alone in a room, hairbrush and hand like a microphone, almost every day. Her heartbeat faster. It was different this time. She was excited again, back to being lost in the moment, to just being a teenager. Adulthood could wait. She exhaled for the first time in a long time. And then she opened her mouth without thinking.
Starting point is 00:38:12 She didn't scream. She sang. She couldn't pretend that the Manchester attack never happened. No one could. But she could remember this better. This was the moment that no one could take away from her. this indescribable sensation of singing along with 55,000 people. In reality, there were millions of people singing along.
Starting point is 00:38:36 Fans tuned into live streams of the benefit around the world. The BBC's stream alone peaked at 14.5 million viewers. Every time someone felt hope or peace, a couple more notes joined the worldwide harmony. Concerned parents and terrified fans began to feel an ounce of relief. Even the officers working on the case felt it, including the one going over Salman Abides file over and over again. They knew now that there was no network in England that supported the bomber.
Starting point is 00:39:05 That was the ultimate relief. The One Love Manchester concert would go on to raise over $23 million to distribute to the victims of the attack and their families. It was a serious win to help soften the blow of even more serious losses. The kind of losses that you can never get back. Thousands of people lost their innocence on Mayfield. 22nd, 2017. 22 people lost the chance
Starting point is 00:39:34 to sing again. And that is the ultimate disgrace. I'm Jake Brennan, and this is Disgraceland. Disgraceland was created by yours truly and is produced in partnership with Double Elvis. Credits for this episode can be found on the show notes page at
Starting point is 00:39:58 disgracelandpod.com. If you're listening as a Disgraceland All-Axus member, thank you for supporting the show. We really appreciate it. And if not, you can become a member right now by going to disgracellandpod.com slash membership. Members can listen to every episode of disgrace land ad free. Plus, you'll get one brand new exclusive episode every month.
Starting point is 00:40:20 Weekly unscripted bonus episodes, special audio collections, and early access to merchandise and events. Visit disgracelampod.com slash membership for details. Rate and review the show and follow us on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook at DisgracelamPod. and on YouTube at YouTube.com slash at Disgraceland Pod. Rockerola. All right, discos, what did you think of this Ariana Grande episode?
Starting point is 00:40:50 Give us a call. Let us know, 617-906-66-6638, voicemail and text at Disgraceland pod on the socials. Coming up next in Disgraceland, our new episode on the shocking death of the voice singer, Christina Grimmie. Don't go anywhere. Joy is essential and it's also elusive, but now there's a new, an exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence. Joy 101.
Starting point is 00:41:17 It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotby. If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats. Open your free IHeart Radio app. Search Joy 101 and listen now. Joy 101 with Hoda Kotby is presented by CVS. In 2023, Bachelor star Clayton Eckerd
Starting point is 00:41:39 was accused of fathering twins. But the pregnancy appeared to be a hoax. You doctored this particular test twice, Ms. Owens, correct? I doctored the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. Greg Gillespie and Michael Marantini. My mind was blown.
Starting point is 00:42:00 I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trapped. Laura, Scottsdale Police. As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences. Listen to a love trapped podcast on the Eye Heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Sometimes a suspect is found guilty before a verdict is ever read in court. On the Wicked Words podcast, I talk with the writers who dig deep into the cases that changed history,
Starting point is 00:42:27 including Marsha Clark, who went from prosecuting one of the most famous murder cases to writing crime fiction. It doesn't matter that you didn't take part in the murder. If you were at the scene at all, you're guilty of murder. Every week, the real story is revealed. Join us every Monday for new episodes of Wicked Words. Listen to Wicked Words on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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