Morbid - Episode 629: “Weirdos’ Audiobook Club” presented by Audible – Blue Beard with Special Guest, Spencer Henry From Cult Liter
Episode Date: December 13, 2024Weirdos!! It’s our second SPECIAL BONUS EPISODE brought to YOU by our friends at Audible!Today we’re joined by a member of the PodFam, Spencer Henry from Cult Liter, Obitchuary & Goss...ip's Bridle! Join us while we chat about Jim Clemente & Peter McDonnell “Blue Beard”! Join the “Weirdos’ Audiobook Club" AND the conversation as we talk about the Title that dramatizes true events in a radio style drama! Hear about the productions origins, as well as the immense effort put into creating such an immersive experience. Haven’t listened yet? Don’t worry about it, friend! Go to Audible.com/weirdos for YOUR free trial! And don’t forget to click the episode post on Instagram to comment YOUR favorite aspects of the production, and discuss with other Weirdos who enjoyed the title, as well!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, Weirdos. I'm Ash. I'm Alayna. And I'm Spencer. And we are having another installment
of our Weirdos Audio Book Club. So thank you for being here
today everybody. We're grateful for you.
So grateful. If you didn't know, we have Spencer Henry from Morbid Network's cult leader, obituary,
and their newest baby show, Gossip Spridal.
Hi, everyone. I'm so excited to be here.
We're excited to have you. I feel like you're the perfect fit for this because you love
like old timey true crime.
Love it.
There's a lot of reasons as we go into this title today, why it
resonated with me and I just loved it so much.
Oh, I'm excited to hear that makes me excited.
I know. Well, before we dive into the title, we want to thank
audible again for the partnership
and for bringing this special little bonus to all of you guys. Bluebeard is an Audible original,
so if you haven't already listened, head on over to Audible to dive into this title. Our
lovely friends are sweethearts at Audible, and they're still offering that free trial for you
guys. So you can take hold of that nifty gifty at audible.com slash weirdos for your free trial.
And of course, we also covered this case on morbid.
It was episode 626.
So if you need to refresh your memory at all, or if you want to listen to that for your next morbid listening journey,
it's there for you.
It's there for you.
We're there for you.
This title is there for you.
We're all... everything is there for you.
It's true.
Do it.
It's a crazy case.
Like this case, I went into,
cause it was my episode when we covered it on morbid.
It was my episode.
It was my episode.
Not yours.
It was mine.
And when we went into it, I was like,
oh, I think I've heard of this.
I don't know if I like, I don't know the details,
but I was like, oh, this is like one of these guys that just like abandons women and takes their money.
Like, you know, the classic tale, like an H.H. Holmes-y style guy.
So much.
Yeah.
And it did kind of feel like he had those vibes to him just because of all the fraud
and shit he was committing, like across borders and shit.
And the aliases, the alias. Canada, the alias I.
Like this guy's bonkers.
Oh, he is wild.
And organized.
And I'm like, RIP Walter, you would have loved Tinder.
Oh my God, truly.
Yes.
That would have made his scheme so much easier.
Because like thinking about like the log books and shit
that he had to keep to keep his different wives
straight. Keep track of them, yeah.
And letters.
If he wanted to, he would.
Absolutely. He had to keep his communication with them straight, what he told one, what he told the
other, the different stories he was telling them about why he was out of town all the time.
I can't remember what I had for dinner last night.
No, that's a lot to keep up with. Yes. Stressful. I can't imagine what his nervous system looked like.
Oh, it was riddled. It was riddled with anxiety.
Maybe it wasn't though. Maybe he was just totally cool as a cucumber.
I mean, yeah. I think he just riddled our nervous system with anxiety.
Exactly. Well, I think he just was really good at probably compartmentalizing all of that.
Definitely.
You know, like dissociating from all of it.
Yeah, he had to have.
It's a good point.
He probably learned that in childhood because like, if you go back and listen to the episode
where we cover the real case, like he definitely had a gnarly childhood.
Yeah.
So that's a good point, Spencer.
Oh, I listened. Oh, I listened.
Oh, I listened.
You better believe.
But yeah, I think a lot of times that's like survival tactic is learning how to compartmentalize
all those separate areas of your life and kind of dissociate from them a little bit.
And that's probably how he was able to do that and not have these really strong emotional
ties to any of it.
He was never really taught to have a strong emotional tie to anything
because his own parents treated him like shit. His mother really treated him like shit. And
then, I mean, once he finally got out of there, what was he 12 years old, I think, when he
got out of there and went on his own? It's like, then the world treated him like shit.
And obviously that's no validation or like justification for what he did. It's like, then the world treated him like shit. And obviously that's no validation or like justification for what he did. It's just, I think this is why he was able, like
you said, to just like shut it off. Cause he was like, well, no one's ever had any connection
to me. So why should I have a real connection to anyone else?
I think you're, I think that's exactly it.
Yeah. Everyone used him for what they could get out of him. So he just decided that that
was the life he was going to live. And he did it in the awful way.
Yeah, he did it back.
Exactly.
And he could have gone the other way.
Plenty of people have.
Plenty of people have tragic backgrounds.
Plenty of people get treated like shit.
And they go on to be amazing people who are like, I'm not going to continue this cycle.
But he's an asshole.
Go to therapy, Walter.
Go to therapy.
Get a gratitude journal.
Yes. Be grateful. These are all steps. Do some self-work. Go to therapy, Walter. Go to therapy, get a gratitude journal.
Yes, be grateful.
These are all steps.
Do some self work.
Well, before we get into it even further, I just want to talk really quickly about the
writers for this title and the process because it's really, this is an interesting one.
It is.
So one of the names you're definitely going to say, wait a second, I know that name.
Jim Clemente is one of the authors of this.
He's a former FBI profiler who was part of the team
that cracked the DC sniper case.
Which is wild.
Yeah.
That's a big deal.
He's been part of like huge cases.
Like this guy has flex on flex on flex.
He's a former New York prosecutor.
He's a writer and producer for Criminal Minds.
Oh, love that show. Yep. He's a former New York prosecutor. He's a writer and producer for Criminal Minds.
Oh, love that show.
Yep.
He's a podcaster for Real Crime Profile, Best Case, Worst Case, FBI Profilers, and
Criminal Archives.
He's after our own heart with all those podcasts.
He is.
And he's also a consultant for law enforcement and for creative projects that involve his
massive expanse of expertise.
And he's just like, wow, impressive.
And he had like a really tough beginning to life as well.
He has a lot of things in his backstory that he could have turned the other way and he
went this way.
So he's like also very inspirational if you read up on him.
Definitely.
And he was a first responder at 9-11.
So. Wow.
Yeah. So he's just how do you even lift that resume?
Like, I don't even know how he carries it around with him.
Right. He's done it all.
And then his co-author was Peter McDonald, who is an author with forty three books.
Like, damn. Forty 43 books. That's insane.
What? That's all the books. I can't name 43 books. Like, wow. Truly. He's also a podcaster
and a journalist. So together, this was the perfect team, I think, to do something like this.
Yeah. 100%.
A good duo.
The duo of the century.
What's interesting is they went into this
actually thinking that they were going to make a documentary series.
Oh, yeah.
And then it turned into this title,
which I love knowing how a project started and evolved.
And I feel like, I mean, this still could make an excellent documentary series, but I'm glad that they did the title. That makes so much sense. If you listen to
the title, that it was laid out that way, because my favorite thing about it was, like, just
listening to it, like you can fully have visuals on everything that's happening at the time. They
did such a good job with translating that. Yes, 100%. They really did. And it reminded me a little bit
of your new show, Gossip Spridle,
with all the soundscaping and everything.
The immersive experience of it all.
I was like, oh, Spencer's gonna love this.
No, I truly, all of it, I was obsessed
listening to it the whole time.
I felt like I was in an old detective novel.
Yes, you get transported.
When you can hear the music, the old timey, oh. Give me a cigarette, babe. Yes, you get transported when you can hear the music, like the old timey, like, oh, I just.
Give me a cigarette, babe.
Yes.
And let me just unravel this.
Give me a cigarette and a fedora and I'm ready to go, baby.
You're sure?
Well, it all got started when Jim Clemente's friend,
he was helping this elderly woman
just clean out a storage locker, like most inconspicuous thing you could ever think of. And she, they
were like clearing out random boxes. And she was in LA, right? And she told him, oh, you
can just get rid of that box over there. And he was like, okay, like maybe we should check
inside first, just, you know, make sure nothing important is in here. And something important wasn't that box. It contained this
leather bound tome and that contained Bluebeard Watson's confession inside, which is insane.
I just got chills.
Yes. He confessed to the murder of 10 wives and to think that that leather bound tome was in there
containing that confession. Full confession.
Like three days worth of confession. And this tome actually belonged to the one and only JB Armstrong, who's the PI that was
hired by Catherine when she suspected that her husband was just cheating.
Oh my god.
Mrs. Wambacher.
Mrs. Wambacher, exactly.
So just literally opening that up and sifting through the pages must have been bonkers wild
bananas.
Yes. Imagine finding that.
Oh, and Jim Clemente has it now in his personal collection.
Yeah, he got to talk.
Our producer, Mikey, got to talk to him and he showed him on the Zoom and we were all,
Mikey was showing us afterwards.
We're like, oh my God.
We got to get Jim on the horn.
Let's get Jim on here.
Show me your book.
Show me that leather bound home, Jim.
I want to see your book.
I'm trying to me your book.
Show me that leather bound tome Jim.
I want to see your book.
I'm trying to see it.
Well obviously they were immediately interested in this story once they heard about this discovery
and once they sifted through this tome of theirs.
So they researched Watson even more to find out about his crimes, his detailed confession.
And when I say detailed, like I said, it took this guy three days to get everything out.
And it was that confession that really voiced the narrative of Watson in this title.
So it's very true to who Watson actually was.
Yeah, for sure.
And you can chat like he does because it's Joseph Fiennes that plays him, he does a good job of making him...
Unlikable.
Unlikable, but you could see why women would be drawn to him in a way, almost.
Yeah, because if you were going...
He walks the line.
If you were going into this story blind, I think you would be like,
oh, I like this guy, like, what's this guy's story?
But if you know the case and you go into it,
you're like, I don't like you.
But you're kind of like toying with yourself of like,
I kind of want to like you, but I know what you do.
Yeah.
For sure.
But after working out the whole story,
Clemente and McDonald pitched this story
to our friends over at Audible.
And they suggested maybe converting it
into a radio style drama, actually.
And ultimately, it ended up being directed
by a Canadian director.
And this is interesting.
Canadian radio-style dramas continued way past the point
where they did in US, like when we transitioned over to TV.
So he was really well-versed in that type of production
because, you know, they experienced them way longer.
But to talk more about the production,
let me hand it over to my girl, Elena.
Because this is really interesting.
Like Spencer said, it's like a super immersive,
like you feel like you're there experience.
And that definitely goes for some of the actors,
like Catherine played by Karen David,
Watson's played by Joseph Fiennes,
and JB Armstrong, our guys, Adrian Pasdar.
I think the three of them did an amazing job,
but what really set this whole thing
into a different realm, I think,
is that how they recorded this.
So they recorded live in three different time zones,
first of all.
Each recording space for each actor,
it was set up and movement was choreographed.
So the actors would move through the space
while the microphone was set in the middle of the room.
So all of this would impact the sound.
So audio was like 3D immersive.
You heard the movements that they were making,
because they were physically making those movements in a room.
Like it wasn't put in later or something like that.
So you heard them in real time, like very organically.
Wow.
Isn't that cool?
It is cool.
And I feel like that's a very different
and unique style of doing something like this.
Definitely. And just the fact that people
in three different time zones
were able to collaborate like this.
I'm like, damn, I can barely get a meeting on the books with East Coasters.
Literally.
That's the thing, you know?
Like, we were trying to, we can barely get time to hang out with friends.
Like, just us trying to all get our schedules.
Meanwhile, they're like, let's soundscape this shit and record the entire title all
at once.
In three different time zones. Wow, that's incredible. Yeah, it's soundscape this shit and record the entire title all at once. In three different times. Wow, that's incredible.
Yeah, it's crazy.
So what I think also makes like takes this one and kind of like separates it from a lot
of titles is the way that the this is obviously inspired by a true crime case.
And they kept a lot of it very true to what happened and the way that they kind of like fictionalize parts of it
to me didn't impact the case in a way that was like negative.
I think if anything, it only made it easier to follow.
I definitely agree.
Like the plot.
It just added to the story,
but it didn't add anything unnecessary.
Exactly.
Totally.
And it's just an engaging way to tell the story.
Like with this radio style and 3d audio
It like we said pulls you into each scene
You feel like you're there you feel like if you close your eyes
You can just like hear all this because it's like we were talking about before like the the music in the background
And you can hear someone lighting up a cigarette and you can hear so you feel like you get this
Everything happening all around the room kind of feeling.
And it's also cool that this narrative definitely places it in that specific time and place.
Like it has nods to the formation of the Bureau of Investigations, which is like blowing,
that blew my mind.
Just like being in a place that you're like, oh, that didn't exist yet.
Like, fuck.
And it was also like the end of the Spanish flu
that they have a nod to, the beginning of prohibition.
I think all those things being tapped at during this
really placed you in that time.
Yeah, place you and like little reminders along the way,
like this is where we are, you know.
Like we're not in 2024.
Right.
When I kept thinking of
other like infamous crimes of that time, like the Wineville chicken coop murders, and all of these
Los Angeles crimes that happened. I mean, not the same year, but like within that realm. And it's
just, I don't know, it's so fascinating to see how everything was handled in those days in comparison
to now.
And there's a lot of things that you look back and you're like, why would they do that?
Why wouldn't they do this?
But a lot of what they were doing is still really advanced given the tools that they
had at the time.
Yes, absolutely.
We were always talking about that how in these time periods, it's like,
we don't have a camera on every street corner. We don't have someone with a phone recording
it. We don't have a digital footprint. We don't have this and that.
Even like fingerprinting was still in its infancy. It took a lot to solve these crimes.
Which makes it more fascinating in my opinion.
Yeah, for sure. Yeah.
Well, and it makes you wonder too, certain crimes that happen today, you're like, how'd they not figure that out? Because it's like true. How are
they catching these people with literally just like boots on the ground detective work here?
Like that's what this is. And I mean, and also like speaking to how they, they were able to solve
this stuff. One of the great themes in this whole thing is women not being passive and seeking out answers.
Which I love, because you think of this case as a whole,
and I mean, women are the ultimate victims in this case,
but they're also the hero of this case.
Absolutely.
Like, Kat is a fucking boss.
Yeah, you want to talk about feet on the boots on the ground?
Yes.
Let's talk about Kathryn Wanabaker because...
Let's talk about her.
Damn.
Because she was also the one, first of all, she wouldn't let anything,
she wasn't letting that go in the beginning.
She was like, I'm pretty sure he's having an affair.
Fuck him.
We're going to catch him.
I'm getting my divorce.
Yeah.
Just to think that she needed to have like a straight up reason to get divorced
and like a very compelling one, not just like somebody had to be her husband had to be guilty
of a crime for her to be granted the divorce.
You should just be able to have a divorce if you don't like his ass anymore.
Yeah, it's so it's so complicated because even now there's, I mean, it's a lot easier
to divorce somebody now.
But it's still like this personal battle
that I think a lot of people have where there's so much back and forth.
So I can't imagine doing that and on top of that, having to have like a good reason in
the eyes of the court or the law in order to go through with it.
Right.
And that like even cheating was barely sufficient.
Yeah.
You can tell Kat is having that like personal grapple because even when she
knows how terrible he is, and she's like working with a private investigator,
when when Walter calls her and talks about wanting to knock her up, she's
like, well, maybe I should call this whole thing off. And I was a girl. No,
don't. But it shows that she
still was kind of like battling with thoughts of whether or not she should just kind of
ignore everything and put it on the back burner. She was a product of the time. Yeah, I was just
going to say society was influencing her big time and being like, maybe I should just have a baby
with him and we can have that, you know, classic family and I'll just ignore everything.
You know what fixes a toxic relationship?
Oh, baby.
Yeah, that'll fix things.
Well, and like to prove your point even further, like to add to it, he went after older women,
like widows, people who had previously been married and lost somebody, you know, like
these women did want to have families and for a lot of them, it was like their quote unquote last
chance to have a family.
Yeah, they're vulnerable.
They're susceptible.
They're kind of like backed into a corner again, by societal norms and societal pressure.
But yeah, absolutely.
100%.
Yeah, I want to high five Kat from the future.
Exactly.
And like, girl, you did it. And while Kat, like in the actual case, she didn't like, you know, team up with the, and
like go to the extents that she went to in the title.
She did not, it wasn't her just sitting back and not doing this stuff.
Like she, like we said, was the one who was like, I'm pretty sure he's having an affair
and I'm not letting it go.
So JB Armstrong, like let's get going.
And she even provided additional information and documents to further prove like once it
started unraveling, she was like, oh, here's all this shit.
If that's going to help you nail him, like here it all is.
Like I found some more shit for you guys.
And that's her in real life.
Like that she really did do that.
Like she was vital in unraveling this whole thing
because she wasn't even as a product of that time and society around her at the time, she
wasn't a woman who was going to sit down and just be comfortable passively letting these
things happen to her. She knew something was amiss right off the bat. She took action right off the bat. And of course she had no
idea like no way of knowing how a miss things were.
What exactly she was unraveling here.
And what she was up against and it's like once she found out that there was like way
more shit than just an affair that she was like, he could possibly be murdering these
women and like he maybe he was going murder you instead of like like just falling
apart which he had every right to do hearing that kind of news about your fucking husband
she turned around and was like how can I help how can I make sure that he doesn't do this to
anyone else and they're like what a badass 100% she like followed her intuition yeah and I mean
it's the ultimate like going through his phone behavior, like leads you down this crazy
rabbit hole where you're like, Oh, okay, this is much deeper than I thought. Yes, I love that her
version of going through his phone is trying to get into his briefcase. Yeah. His duffel bag that
he carried around everywhere. The class which I'm like, could you be more conspicuous?
I know. Just carrying around a duffel bag of marriage certificates?
And being super weird about said briefcase slash duffel bag? You're going to carry around
a bunch of shit. Don't be so weird about it.
Listen, she is a victim in this situation, but there were several red flags, especially
when you're listening to her narrative in the title.
I mean, well, first of all, I was laughing in the beginning because she's talking about meeting
Walter for the first time. And she's talking about how he kind of catfished her. And she says,
no one would accuse him of being handsome, which is diabolical. That is the biggest read.
Also, in the book, she's talking about like they got married after four weeks. And she's like, I couldn't think of a reason I shouldn't.
And I'm like, girl, I can.
I can think of 10.
Yeah, I could think of 22 different reasons.
Let me list them out for you.
Because he was described as being like a gnome looking motherfucker.
Ugly.
Like he absolutely was.
He was like a gnome like man. That's how they described him.
Little alfalfa too in his mug shot that I just want to rip off.
Just take it right off.
I mean, I don't see it. I mean, who knows what was going on with Walter otherwise.
Who knows? Looks wise. I think he had charisma working for him, unfortunately. I mean, who knows what was going on with Walter otherwise.
Who knows?
Looks wise.
I think he had charisma working for him, unfortunately.
That can work.
Charisma.
That can do the trick.
Uniqueness, nerve, and talent.
And she said too, when he moved in, he moved in with little possessions, and that is also
the goal.
That's ideal.
It's true.
Don't disrupt my space.
Yeah.
We don't need-
You have four things, great.
Your collections here, okay.
We don't need that.
Your briefcase fist over there, everything else, got to get rid of.
Yeah, I think he was just a master manipulator.
Definitely.
Like master manipulator.
And he was playing a character.
Of course.
It's easy to make somebody like a character.
At all times he was playing a character.
You're playing a role.
I do love one of the things I love that they did do in this title is for a brief period of time
while I was listening, I was like,
uh-oh, are they gonna make Kat
and Detective Armstrong fall in love?
Because I will not be pleased with that.
I was worried.
It felt like that might've been the direction
they were going in.
I was like, don't you dare take away her agency like that.
But nay. But they didn't do it.
They did not do it.
And I have to say from coming from two men authors, thank you.
Yes.
Thank you for making this girl a standalone badass.
Yeah, just letting her have her own agency and being her own character that was just
like being a badass and wasn't trying to fall in love with another guy.
What was the test that we were talking about? They passed that test.
The Bechdel test.
They passed the Bechdel test.
Yeah, it did. Because it's not just having this woman be completely in relation to what she's
doing with a man.
A damsel in distress, like, please help me, I don't know what to do. She's like, here's what to do.
Here's what to do, bitch.
This is what I want to do. Put your cigarette out.'s what to do. Here's what to do, bitch.
This is what I wanna do, put your cigarette out,
it's gross, and let's go.
Let's go. Don't be dumb.
Did you guys have a favorite badass B moment of cats?
I mean, I'm a real sucker for any sort of library scene
or imagery in a book.
Yes, me too.
And they're talking about going through the records and she's in the library.
I mean, I get she was thinking about it right now, but when she was going through all the
different Lonely Heart ads and this under different names, but the same-
Comparing them all.
Yep, comparing them all and seeing that it was clearly all written by Wiltard.
I just had a moment where I was like, oh my God, she's cracked the code.
She got her confirmation.
I love that.
I love playing too, to come to that realization.
And the amount of people who tried to convince her
that these were just other men stealing
that lonely hearts ad.
Oh, the gaslighting was unreal.
The gaslighting was outrageous.
Wait, people trying to gaslight a woman? That's crazy.
I've never heard that.
That actually never happens, you guys.
No, that's why it's fiction, you know?
You women, you're hysterical.
You're so crazy.
That's us. We're just kooky.
That's us.
What was yours, Elena?
My badass bitch moment was definitely, I loved when she was like hiring JB Armstrong.
And he was like being like, Whoa, whoa, whoa, at first.
And he's like, because she's like, All right, so what do we need to do?
What do you need me to start working on?
And he was like, No, no, no, you're my client.
Like, I'm the detective here.
I'm the investigator.
And she was like, Actually, no, you're my partner.
Now we're working together.
If you're not willing to treat me as a partner,
I'll go find someone who will."
And I was like, snap, snap, snap, baby.
I was like, yes.
She was like, I don't need to be here.
I'll find somebody who actually respects the partnership
and doesn't treat me like a little peon.
Because this needed to be a partnership.
She had so much of the information that they needed.
Yes.
100%.
And I think going back to like when she cracked the code, I think it was just like, I loved
that she figured it out on her own.
Like she didn't have anybody else really helping her.
Nope.
Other than Hillary, the librarian, who I love.
Queen Hillary.
They were like becoming friends.
And at the end of the book, when there, she walks into the courtroom and she sees Hillary from the library there.
And Hillary's like, I'm here for you. I was like, Oh, I love that. I love that one. She
didn't fall in love and two, she found another female friend to be a badass with. Yes. Love
that. And again, two, like male authors, like snaps to them. Yes, that was great female
friendship and bonds.
And they did a great job with it.
Did you have one Ash?
Yes, this is small, but I love the way that she handled
that hotel owner when she was trying to use his car.
She was like, I will not be swayed, thank you.
Like, uh-uh.
I loved that.
Not happening.
She was so confident.
She was just like, yeah, no.
She's like, I will be taking your car, thank you.
Thank you very much.
Thank you so much.
I feel like they gave her her flowers in this story.
Showed off her badassery.
And again, especially given the time period,
it was very brave of her to do what she did.
And she obviously faced a lot of adversity
while she was doing it, but look what she fucking did.
Yeah, without her, it could have kept going on
and on and on for a long time.
And to think how many more people he could have killed. Absolutely.
Okay. So obviously, I live in Southern California. I live in Los Angeles. And I used to live
in Signal Hill, which is a small unincorporated area where the body of Nina Lee Taloney was
found.
Oh, shit.
I was going through newspaper archives trying to do my own little sleuthing to see if I
could figure out where in relation it was to where I used to live. But I was just finding
like old press photos that didn't have any exact addresses. But I was like, damn.
Oh, that's spooky.
Yeah, that's wild.
I know being in LA must be weird that that way because so many things have happened there.
You're just like surrounded by...
Well, they just get publicized more, I feel like.
Yeah.
That's true.
No, it's true.
And you know the locations of a lot of them, mostly.
Yeah.
So you can just be like, I'm surrounded.
Uh-huh.
100%.
Also, at the end of this whole title, when she speaks the names of all the victims in
the court scene, putting that in there was iconic.
And it was so perfect.
Ending on that was like...
Yeah, I love the nod to the reality and the true part of this crime.
And making sure that they were heard as well. Because obviously,
Kat was the focus of the narrative in this. But the fact that they didn't forget about
the other victims.
Along the way.
That was nice.
100%.
Yeah.
Yeah, we recommend this title, 10 out of 10. If you haven't listened to Bluebeard
on Audible, you got to go listen. And it's a quick listen too.
It's a quick listen. It's a three hour...
You will want more. Exactly. Yeah. It's three hours long. You could, I mean, if you have a long
commute, you could get that done in a day, babe. Yeah. There is one scene of them eating,
just be forewarned. If you don't listen to that, it's less than three hours.
So there you go. It's quick, but just warning. There's also one of them.
You know what?
You'll get there.
So anyway, if you haven't listened to this title,
don't forget that our sweetheart friends over at Audible
are offering you guys a free trial at audible.com slash
weirdos.
Audible.
Head over there for your free trial.
Thank you to Spencer for joining us today.
We love hanging with you.
Thanks for having me.
We love Spencer.
We love you. And if we all want to end this on just maybe a title that we're listening
to or recently listened to that we recommend.
So my recommendation for a title to listen to is Sleep Tight by J.H. Markert. I recommend
all his titles and all his books, in fact, because I think he's a brilliant horror author.
It's a perfect one. It's got like a creepy little fictional town in it. He's really good
at infusing like some supernatural elements, but they don't even feel they feel like they're
just reality in it.
I haven't listened to that yet.
Yeah. And he's got, you know, a serial killer in this one in a small town. He's it's just, he's a great author. I highly, highly to that yet. Yeah. And he's got a serial killer in this one in a small town.
He's a great author.
I highly, highly recommend Sleep Tight.
I have two recommendations.
I just finished, and actually so did Alaina, Wayward.
Oh, so good.
Listening to that title was so whimsical.
There's three female points of view, and they have three different narrators for each one.
And all of them just have the most... I say this all the time about people, but I think I just listen to audio
titles with narrators who have the most soothing voices and these three women, I want them
to read me bedtime stories every single night. So good. And obviously I have to recommend
Elena's Butcher and the Wren and the butcher game. I know the author and she writes a mean
book, baby. Truly. There's also the big hot book of death. I've heard of that one. Have
you heard of that one, Spencer? Spencer Madison? I have heard of that one. That's also a great
one. It's pretty good. And they got I love their their voices to those narrators. True.
I think the guy's annoying. But one I I love is, well, I've been,
I'm like halfway through it right now,
but it's the crime of the century,
Richard Speck and the murders that shocked a nation.
Oh, that's an interesting one.
Dennis Elbrio and William J. Martin.
Love that. Amazing.
So you guys have a bunch of titles to catch up on.
And again, you have your free trial if you head over to that link that I've said 40 times. So we love you. We're grateful
for you. We love you. We hope you keep listening and we hope you keep it weird. But it's weird
that you don't check out these titles today. Bye. Read and listen. Bye. Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha. I'm going to be a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a
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little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a little bit of a If you like morbid, you can listen early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus
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Hello, ladies and germs, boys and girls.
The Grinch is back again to ruin your Christmas
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It's a real Whoville whodunit.
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