Normal Gossip - Normal Gossip Investigates: The Poop Story
Episode Date: February 16, 2024Alex and Jae spent the last month trying to find the source of a tale we first heard back in season two. Is the poop story gossip? An urban legend? Guerilla marketing perpetrated on us all by... Big Toilet? All of the above? You can support Normal Gossip directly by buying merch or becoming a Friend or a Friend-of-Friend at supportnormalgossip.com. Our merch shop is run by Dan McQuade. You can also find all kinds of info about us and how to submit gossip on our Komi page: https://normalgossip.komi.io/ Episode transcript here. Follow the show on Instagram @normalgossip, and if you have gossip, email us at normalgossip@defector.com or leave us a voicemail at 26-79-GOSSIP. Normal Gossip is hosted by Kelsey McKinney (@mckinneykelsey) and produced by Alex Sujong Laughlin (@alexlaughs). Jae Towle Vieira (@jaetowlevieira) is our associate producer. Abigail Segel (@AbigailSegel) is our intern. Justin Ellis is Defector's projects editor. Show art by Tara Jacoby. Normal Gossip is a proud member of Radiotopia.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to a bonus episode of Normal Gossip, the show where we usually bring you
an anonymized gossip from the real world. Today, we are not going to do that. Today,
we are here to do a special story that I know nothing about. So can't wait to find out where
this is going. Here with me is Alex, co-creator of this podcast and our head producer, Alex,
say hello. Hi. And Jay, our associate producer is Alex, co-creator of this podcast and our head producer, Alex. Say hello.
Hi.
And Jay, our associate producer is also here.
Hello, Jay.
Hello.
Yay.
They have brought me something and I'm scared.
Before we get into it though, I just wanted to remind everyone that we are going on a
very tiny mini tour in March.
You can get tickets for that at normalgossiplive.com.
We will be going to Atlanta, Durham, and theoretically DC,
but that show is sold out.
So hello, DC.
I love you.
Can't wait to see you.
Many of you may be asking, when will the real podcast return?
Please, my family, they're starving.
They need gossip, and I do not have an exact date for you yet.
I'm so sorry, but we will be back in April.
April, I promise.
One last thing
before we get into whatever they're about to do. Our editor, Justin, has demanded we
put a content warning at the top of this. So, Justin, take it away.
Hey there, Normal Gossip listeners. This is Justin. Don't be like me and make the mistake
of listening to this episode while trying to eat. Enjoy.
Thank you, Justin. Okay, Alex and Jay, you're in charge now.
Hello. We are so excited to be here. We have a really important piece of investigative
journalism to share with you.
Oh my, okay, Sarah Koenig. Lay it on me.
So today we are here to talk about the poop story.
Dun dun da!
Do you remember what we mean by that?
So after season one or two, I don't remember which one, probably after season two.
It's all a blur.
We did a bonus episode where people called in their gossip and then we responded to it. And one of the stories that was in that episode was a story that we refer to as the poop story.
Would you like to tell us the poop story, Kelsey?
Oh my God, yeah, I can do my best.
What do I remember about the poop story?
It's a girl who she goes on a date with this guy.
Maybe they've seen each other a couple of times.
She goes back to his place. She spends the night.
He lives in a fancy kind of like high,
not super high rise, but kind of high rise apartment
that has like fob door entry and not like a real key.
And that's important because he leaves early
because he has some business job or something
and goes to the airport.
And so she's there all alone.
And then she takes a massive, absolutely huge poop in his toilet, tries to flush it, and
it will not flush.
She's like, oh, this is bad.
So instead of doing any normal thing, like calling a plumber, calling the landlord, calling
a friend, she uses a Ziploc bag to remove the poop from the toilet with the intention to take the plastic bag with her somewhere question mark.
But then she does not. In fact, she leaves it on the counter with a note like saying like I had a great time. Let's do this again.
Oh, that's right.
She accidentally leaves the poop on the counter with the note and the door automatically locks behind her so she can't get back in.
Yeah, so the poop is in there with the note and then I don't remember what she does in my memory.
She just like dies basically. Like she's like, well, this is the end for me. Goodbye. It does
not really make any efforts. And I remember saying, pull the fire alarm. Like. So that story was horrifying.
And I remember like every time I read it, I screamed.
And when we played it for you, I also screamed, even though I'd heard it like five times at
that point, because it was so horrifying.
Um, the thing is when this episode came out, we heard from so many people.
We got Instagram comments. We got DMs, we got messages individually, we got emails to the
normal gossip account, we got emails individually.
Yep.
They said, this happened to my friend.
I've heard this story before.
I saw this on a commercial.
This is an urban legend.
Yes.
Which is like the true range of a response to any gossip, right?
Is either it happened to me or this is all a lie, right?
Like, that's like the spectrum.
And it's interesting that the emails, there was definitely
a wave after the episode came out,
but like they have kept coming over the years.
People find that episode, they still
have these strong reactions.
They still want to tell us that they think
they heard a version of the poop story on Letterman
eight years ago.
Yeah, I mean, I do think it's the kind of story
that is so iconic and so well-paced, right?
How many of our stories do I actually remember?
The fact that I can like recount, kind of beat for beat
what happens in this story two years after we recorded it is kind of astounding. It makes sense that
if you had heard this even once, you would be like, I've heard this story before. And
in the same way that like all viral stories happen, a well-told story will maintain its
shape. So if you have heard this, you heard it in this order. And so you say, well, then
my friend told it to me and therefore this is a lie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we got really curious about this.
This is something that we have wanted to do.
I love it when you two hyper fixate.
I think that's beautiful.
Ever since we got started getting these emails, we were like, what if we did journalism?
What if we did journalism for gossip?
As trained journalists, what if phone calls? Exactly. So Jay and I have spent the last month or so
creating what is essentially a giant bulletin board covered in red string.
Yeah, you're like that. It's always sunny in Philadelphia,
a meme of Charlie like pointing.
Yes, we are both Charlie.
And then on the board is just photos of poop.
Our hope was to track down the original protagonist of the story.
OK, I'm going to give you a spoiler right now.
We did not do that.
It's crazy how when you don't have the funding of cereal, you can't
crack down the teller of an original story. But yeah, go ahead.
But but we did talk to several people and this story spans several decades, three
different countries, two continents, and so many people.
Beautiful. The first person you're going to hear from is Lizzie.
Okay.
Lizzie is the person who originally sent us the poop story.
Oh, great.
Good story teller.
Her version happened around 2019 in a northeastern city in the US.
Wow.
I'm so glad that we have you here, Lizzie.
You are the source of it all.
Do you remember the first time you heard it?
So I was trying to think about this.
I remember who told me, but what's funny is I've retold the story so many times because
I find it so entertaining and felt like I could share it because I'm a couple of degrees
removed from who I understood was the main character.
So I can't visually place where I was the first time
that I heard it.
I was in my current city and I'm gonna guess
this was probably 2019 when I heard it.
I don't know if I even thought about when it happened.
Who do you believe it happened to?
So I understand the main character of the story to be
not my friend Charlotte but her friend's friend. Someone who I don't know but I
should be able to believe is real. If that makes any sense. Yeah it's far enough
a way that you're safe but close enough that like you can trust that makes any sense. Yeah, it's far enough away that you're safe
But close enough that like you can trust that it's real
Did you have any idea that your story that you sent in had sparked this uproar?
So it's actually I think about it all the time
I remember the first time after the episode
Error and I saw people in the comments saying
like this isn't true or whatever and I was so nervous that oh my gosh you know
people probably think that I'm lying and that you could even identify that it
was me but I was just so guilty like oh I'm out here telling a lie and I don't
even know it's a lie and everyone's upset. I just felt really nervous
about it. I don't know, mostly because I didn't intend to give you bad information or a bad story.
Well, I mean, the problem is he gave us a great story.
That is a good way to look at it.
Okay, so I have a few thoughts. So I want to start with the last thing she said, actually,
which is this like fear upon seeing people say,
like, this isn't true. This is made up that maybe you did lie. And I just want to push
back on that for one second because two lie requires intent in the same way that if you
want to win a libel case, you have to prove that someone intended to tell a dishonesty or a lie against you.
I have a kind of fascination with the mindset that like we should be concerned with exactly what the right story is here, right?
And she says, right, she heard the story in 2019.
Fourth hand is what she says, which means already you should be taking this with like a Morton's box of salt, right?
Like that is
three years after she claims it happened from four different people. So that is like, you should be
skeptical of that story. And I'm sure we're going to talk about urban legends at some point in
this conversation. But I think part of the reason a story like this in particular spreads is one,
it's crazy. Two, it's really fun. But three, it's kind of like a warning
shot. Yes. Right? Like there is an aspect to it that is like, remain vigilant, never let your guard
down. It's a cautionary tale. It's a cautionary tale. Exactly. And they're kind of creating a
cautionary tale as like a moralism in the same way that like an ASOP's fable would function.
a cautionary tell as like a moralism in the same way that like an ASOP's fable would function. Okay, so our next person we talked to is somebody named Tori and actually texted us during one of
our live shows. Wow Tori, hello. For people who haven't been to our live shows, we have a feature
where we invite people to text us their secrets live in the room.
That's normalgossiplive.com.
And Tori texted us pretty much verbatim, the poop story.
And I texted her from onstage.
I was like, oh my God, I'm going to follow up with you.
I have questions to ask.
So we finally talked to her.
She lives on the East Coast in a city.
And she says that she heard the story around 2015
and in the Chicago area.
Okay, so this is already interesting
because 2015 is before Lizzie says she heard the story.
Yeah.
So we have someone reporting on the story from before the story in theory existed.
I guess to start off, could you just tell me the version of the story that you know?
Yes. I named her, I think in my text, Mandy was a senior in college and her biggest crush in the
world, Greg. They went to school together and she had always been into him and nothing ever happened.
When I think it was like the last week of school,
they finally hit it off and go home together one night
and it's an amazing night.
So he leaves to go to class
and apparently she has had to go to the bathroom
for like 20 minutes and she's like, okay, he's gone and I was my chance.
And she goes to flush the toilet and it is not being flushed.
What do I do?
Like, so she grabs a bag, she grabs her business.
And she's like, I can't throw this away here either.
So she's like, I also can't have a poo in a bag in my hands in the
hallway of this apartment. So she leaves to go scope out a quick, quick path to the trash
can. She finds it. She's like, this will be great. No one will detect me. I'll go, I'll
go in and out. So she goes back to the apartment, but it was an automatic locking door. So the door is locked, the poo is in the bag,
like in the apartment, on the counter, I don't know,
somewhere not hidden.
And she never spoke to or texted or talked to Greg ever again.
And they graduated and it has joined the legions
of dating folklorists. ever again. And they graduated and it has joined the legions of
of dating folk Laura. I like, I know how this story ends. And I
was still like, Oh, God, no. You try and like debunk her
thinking throughout, but it checks out at every stage. Like,
yeah, I would do that also. Yes, I would do that also yes I would do that also so yeah
high stress, high anxiety. My roommate and good friend Jill who I asked if I
could say her name and she said I encourage it actually she told me this
probably our senior year of college a friend had told her and she told me. Does
Jill remember where she got the story from?
So I asked her knowing that this was going to happen and she was like no paper trail,
like I don't remember who told me.
She has no idea who told her, she's trying to remember but
so far no, no luck. How many times do you think you've told this story? I mean, at least a handful when I first heard it, I'm sure.
But then it didn't come to my brain for a while until I was sitting and watching the show and the text like,
text or gossip story and I was racking my brain and then poop in a bag came to my brain and I was like, yes, of course,
this is the one I'm going to tell you guys about.
Oh man, I want you to know that when I got that text, I was on stage and I was like,
oh my god, somebody sent a poop back story, oh my god.
Another one.
Yeah, it was so exciting.
I hadn't heard that episode so I went and I was listening and I was like, okay, so the, you know, the college part wasn't there and like this wasn't there. But the core of the story is exactly the same. And it's like, where did this come from? What is the true? Yes, that's what we're trying to get to the bottom of. I'm so excited to see the journey and see if there is a pot of gold at the end of this proverbial rainbow.
Okay, so it's younger in this version, which does actually make more sense to me.
It makes more sense to me that you would make this choice as a college kid in general.
Right. Scared of toilets, just panicking.
Scared of people helping you, scared of...
Yeah.
Also, student housing tends to be automatic locks.
Yeah, exactly.
Like all of that makes a little more sense to me.
One thing that I'm already finding interesting here is that at some point, we hit a person who cannot remember where they got it from.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think that that's really interesting
for several reasons.
The first is that a story that permeates far enough,
you will hear from enough people that you will no longer
remember who gave it to you.
And it's not really important exactly who
told it the first time, right?
Like, all you need is one's not really important exactly who told it the first time, right? Like,
all you need is one girl to have pooped and put it in a bag for this story to be quote-unquote
true. And like, there are six billion people that exist, right? Like, it seems completely
possible that this has happened at least once, if not more than once.
Yeah, the thing that makes the story work is not the identity of the girl.
It doesn't matter who she is.
She could be anybody.
She could be anywhere.
It's like the drama of what happens in the story.
Yeah, like all we have to do is reframe the question a little bit.
Is it true that when you're dating somebody new and it's really promising, it would be
terrible if they saw your poop?
Yeah.
Most people would be like, yes. That would be terrible. That's your poop. Yeah. Most people would be like, yes.
That would be terrible.
That is a nightmare.
That's a nightmare.
Somebody contacted us with an update on the poop story.
They were like, I know more.
I can't.
OK.
And this was months after the episode came out.
And unfortunately, we were not able to track this person down
to ask them more questions.
So this is all we've got.
15 years ago, I went to a World Toilet Day event. That's a real day. Look it up. And some friends had organized an event around World Toilet Day as a fundraiser. I'm in my mid-20s. I've got nothing
better to do. But it was great. And one of the most memorable moments was the storytelling part of that evening and it was this story. I remember it and it
haunts me to this day so I'm so excited to give you some more information on that.
Two details that were missing from the first storyteller was that these
silly asses went on one of those dinner dates that has ten courses in the meal.
Most of us know not to do that. Why? Because you have a huge shit the next day, as our
protagonist found out. Another detail that's missing is it wasn't actually a Ziploc bag.
It was one of those single use shopping bags, a plastic kind.
So it was much bigger to work with
and she could kind of put her hand in it,
inside out, reach in, grab the poop, tie it up.
It's more efficient, sure,
but it's obviously a more disgusting image
because of just kind of the low fineness of the plastic bag.
But maybe not as bad because it's not clear like a Ziploc.
Anyway, here's the update.
Couple years later, she's moved past her shame.
She did not indeed hear from this date ever again.
She's seeing a new guy, things are going really well.
They've been dating for a couple of months
and they get into this conversation one night
about what's the worst, most embarrassing thing
that's ever happened to you on a date.
She tells this story.
He interrupts her near the very end and says, oh my God, that was you?
That was my roommate.
You're amazing.
And I'm happy to report they got married.
Anyway, enjoy y'all.
What?
What the fuck? Right? got married. Anyway, enjoy y'all. What?
What the fuck?
Right?
I have questions.
OK, wow.
So I'm thinking about a piece of gossip
that has been circulating recently in the world,
that I heard truly secondhand.
Like my friend knows someone that this happened to. And so I have watched this piece of gossip travel
far, far, far and wide, and I have watched it iterate.
And one of the things that's very interesting
about watching a piece of gossip that you like
have an original voice memo from
the event of iterate is that you notice which details get added and which ones stick.
So what is it about something that makes it an important detail?
So this person starts off by saying two important details.
One, it was a 10-course dinner.
Two, it was a single- use grocery bag, which is hysterical
because neither of those details changes the plot
of the story at all.
Right?
There is nothing in those details that would make you be like,
oh, this must be the right story.
But to the listener, that is an important distinction.
They're saying it's important that it's in a non-transparent bag,
because that is a weirder message and it's also grosser.
And like it would stink more, right?
And you would have to open it, right?
There's like levels to the single use grocery bag
that makes it a more interesting prop in the story.
So that's all very fascinating.
And I love that.
The update sounds not to be like
true or false after I just went on a rant about true or false. Update sounds fake as shit to me.
And like, it's a beautiful bow to tie on a story. But like, often things that happen in the real
world sound fake because like
Truly the truth is stranger than fiction like the emails we get are weirder than any
novel I've ever read. They're all so strange people are so weird and
I don't know. I find that really fascinating that like in this version of the story
You get a happy ending and in the other versions of the story, you get a happy ending. And in the other versions of the story, you don't. Yeah, it makes me wonder about, you know, the context of World Toilet Day. It's like, we don't
want to leave people feeling horrified. We want to leave them feeling like there's hope.
Right. We don't want people to believe that toilets are their enemy. We want to believe
that toilets can bring them true love. Yeah.
Learn more about toilets.
It's actually a plot from Big Toilet all along.
This was actually just made up by like Kohler, right?
Oh my God.
Next, you'll be hearing from Jen.
Okay.
Jen was one of the people who wrote to us, letting us know very kindly that this was an urban legend.
Uh-huh.
And as I was emailing more with Jen,
it turns out that Jen knows this because she has her own long history with this story.
Oh.
It sounds like Jen first heard this in the early 2000s in England.
Okay, great.
Do you happen to remember like when you first heard the story?
I actually do, yes.
So I have an older cousin,
she's probably about six or seven years older than me.
My family is very good at storytelling.
It's like, there's always like a couple of people in the family who are the ones that will hold court. Not that I'm myself
like that, obviously. But she's definitely one of these people and I remember being probably about
early teens, I reckon, or maybe like year 12 or something, in her telling this story, that it happened to a friend,
I think like friend of a school friend
was how she'd heard of it.
And very much like it was true.
So that was probably about like,
yeah, like 18 years ago,
I recognized her dear around them.
I think when I went to uni, Andrew all sat around
having free drinks and stuff before going out
and all telling these wild stories.
And then I'm pretty sure it would have been around then.
I'd be like, oh, this crazy thing happened.
And then someone else would be like,
that's an urban legend.
And I was like, oh,
from a small town going to the big city where everyone knows that my story is a trash.
In versions that you've heard over the years, have you ever noticed any differences? Do people put their own spins on it? The straightforward one is just she leaves the poop on the side
and then leaves. Whereas it's good to have a little bit more
pizzazz to it of like,
so there's variations in whether the poop was left
in a box or a bag.
It's like a Tupperware version.
Oh no!
I think I heard the Tupperware version.
Yeah, like a lunchbox.
Yes, oh my God, there's definitely a lunchbox version.
Yes, there is.
That's wonderful, does that mean that somewhere along the line somebody has decided that a
lunchbox is funnier or that a bag is funnier? Which absolutely hats off to them because it's
arguable which one is better. I have a lot of respect actually for, and I think my cousins
like this, for somebody who will hear a story like that, know that it's probably an urban legend or know that it's probably not true and still
tell it anyway. I absolutely love that. I'm like, that's, yeah, because what a delight
that gave me until I realized that everyone had heard that story on. Read it is the blame
for this. I think before read it, we could all go around and pretend that it actually
was our cousin's schoolmate's friend. I hope there is somebody out there who is like,
this happened to me, to their best friend.
I hope that there's somebody out there
that's just whole cloth stealing it as if they did it.
That's the dream.
That's the dream.
You can find the other person, you can find the original.
He was like, yeah, I just lied to all my friends
that I did a shit on someone's character.
First off, I do want to say that like, I know that you warned me up top that we don't have all the answers
here, right, that like, we have not found the other person. But as someone raised and bred a blogger,
I believe in the iterative process of journalism.
If you are the person this happened to,
it's normal gossip at defector.com.
Like if you can get us closer, we will take that.
And like please call 2679Gossip, like let us know.
Because I think that like the desire is to talk to her, right?
That is always going to be everyone's desire is to like hear it from her.
So like if you can get us there, help us.
Thank you.
A couple of things.
Things can happen in multiple countries.
That's not illegal.
People can make the same stupid mistake in England and in America.
So that's not an issue.
But I also think that her going to uni and telling this story
and being told it's an urban legend
is an interesting point here.
Because just because you have heard a story
doesn't mean it's not true.
Just because a gossip is widespread
doesn't mean it isn't real.
In the same way that we tell a story on this podcast every single week,
and half a million people hear it.
So now you've all heard that story,
but that doesn't mean it's an urban legend.
Where is that line exactly is a question that I'm sure we'll come back to.
But if you're telling this story at uni, at some pub,
that means you're telling this story at uni at some pub, that means you're telling this story to like 20 people you
barely know who are then going to go tell that story to 20 more people they barely know. So it's like the
tree of who knows this story becomes infinitely wider in every single one of those tellings. And so like,
yeah, if you told this story to someone at uni, and they're from America, and they come back and tell it, their friends from high school are going to
be like, I'm not saying uni. I'm not doing that. I'm saying college, right? And now it's an American
story, right? Like that, that's all it takes is like that one shift. And like the difference between
this and like one of those old school chain letters or email
forwards is just that this is good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
There's something to like, it doesn't survive unless it's good.
Yeah.
So the last person we talked to is somebody named Adrian Parks.
Okay.
We did a lot of research into the story and Jay actually found a Snopes article
about the story, which quick explain a Snopes article about the story which
quick explainer for the youths who maybe don't know about Snopes. Snopes is a
like fact-checking debunking site that like debunks myths and so this page
referenced a short film from 2007 as the potential source of this story.
So the film is called Sure-Lock, S-U-R-E, Sure-Lock.
A True Pooh story.
Incredible.
Great tagline.
And the film opens with the words based on a true story. Okay. So we track down Adrian, who is the director of the film. And
this is what he had to say.
Yeah, so it all started with Sean Hazel, who's listed as the
producer in it. He was working in advertising. I was working in
the film business. And Sean wanted to create this website called Ad Bakery.
It was basically a platform for creatives,
writers, directors, cinematographers, editors
to have a platform to post their stuff for ad agencies
to sort of see what they could do.
So Sean wanted to make something
that was relatable, shareable and funny.
And he told me this story.
John and I were old friends. We went to high school and university together. And
he told this story in the context of it happening to a mutual friend of ours. So
it was sort of made as this film to launch this advertising website as a
comedy film. You know, we thought we'd get maybe, if we were lucky, a thousand
people would see it eventually.
And I think in a day or two, we had a thousand people
and it just grew exponentially.
It was a viral hit.
The original post had over eight million views
and we actually ended up selling it
to American Standard Toilet Company.
And for them, we got another several million views.
So it has over 10 million views. And we ended up we got another several million views. So it has
over 10 million views. And we ended up winning a Canadian comedy award for it. Very proud
to have an award that has the word poob in it, etched in glass.
So this version of the story happened in the early 2000s in Canada. So we are now in our third country.
And the thing is, Adrian told us that he actually had a run-in with a like similar story at that time.
So I'm going to play the second clip.
We'd sort of had our movie online for several months, maybe a year, less than a year. And again, we'd had a great response, a viral sort of hit, and we got to a certain point
where a lot of people were stealing it and reposting it, and we became very concerned
about, you know, stop stealing our film, and we were trying to track people down and all
that kind of thing.
And another film came online, I believe, that was basically the exact same thing. And another film came online, I believe, that was basically the exact same thing, opened
based on a true story. There were some like even shots that were very similar. And we were like,
what the heck, these people have just remade our film and that so we, you know, we tracked them down,
we got in touch with the filmmakers. And we had this argumentative conversation back and forth where we accused them of stealing our film and they accused us of stealing your film and
cooler heads prevailed and as we sort of talked about it
I think it was we
Discovered the fact that they had made they were making the film at basically the same time it that it was
Premiered at a festival maybe around the same time that we went online or something like that
And it would have been impossible for either of us to have seen
Each other's films and we realized that we just had we'd heard the story of a story
Like a friend of a friend had told this story and it was so it was it was an urban legend
when it was created and so I think we went back to
Sean possibly went back to the the person he'd heard the story from we thought it was the story of a mutual friend and she was like oh no it's a friend of a friend and it's.
It was in half me was someone else and it was it became very fogging like oh we realize that we didn't even realize that we made.
A story of an urban legend you know we thought it was real and it wasn't I think.
You know, we thought it was real and it wasn't I think
That's happened several times if you guys ever track down one person who says yes, this happened to me
Please tell me I'd love to find out same same truly Thank you. Two things that are really interesting about Urban Legends is that when we tell Urban Legends, like people who study Urban Legends, have found that it is always from a friend of a
friend.
You never say, like, I got this 17th hand from a newspaper in San Antonio, right?
It is, this happened to a friend of a friend and it is always local. So it's not a library
somewhere is sinking under the weight of the books in it. It's our library always. So like,
that is how an urban legend functions is by like proximity, by imbuing this story
with more veracity by saying it came from nearby and it came from someone close to us,
right? And like that allows everyone in the vicinity to be like, we suspend all judgment,
which is like a fascinating thing that we see happen here, right? Like he said,
oh, it happened to your mutual friend. And then they
go back to that girl and she said, no, no, no, no, no, no, it happened to a friend of a friend of mine.
And it's like, okay, well, then now, if we asked that person, where did they get it? Right? Like,
it's like, we end up nowhere. Yeah, I actually have a question here before we go any further,
which is, how would you define an urban legend? Ooh, I would define an urban legend as a story that
is told in many places as if it is
proximal to that place in which the details are the same.
And researchers, people who study urban legends full time,
which there are a lot of folklorists in the United
States especially,
would say that it's a spectrum. The line between what gossip is and what is an urban legend
does not exist. It is just a gradient on your way to urban legend. Once a story has been
told enough, it is an urban legend. In some in some ways, this is both, right? The
codifying of gossip makes it an urban legend. I think an urban legend has something to do
with how many people are talking about it in general.
Hmm. It's ubiquitous in a way.
It's ubiquitous. And there's a difference in an urban legend and a legend, right? Like a legend, like fucking the Odyssey is something that we all agree happened to somewhere
else at some other time, right?
And we're like, maybe that's fiction.
An urban legend you believe is true initially, which is part of what's important.
Yeah.
This was a question that I had as we talked to more and more people was
like, how does the intent piece of it work? Like it started to feel to me like there was a little
curse on this story. Like when you hear it, you're fated to retell it, you think it's amazing,
like, wow, this is perfect. I know that that happened to me. This happened to us. Yeah. It
happened to us on the podcast.
And then eventually you learn this is a little bit broader than that or this is an urban
legend.
And so I was wondering like, are all urban legends kind of cursed in that way where you
understand it to be personal at first.
And when you tell it, you're not necessarily thinking that you're telling a tale or like
putting on a show.
Yeah, I think it's I would push back on that a little bit, right?
Like, I think you do understand that you're putting on a show.
Like, I think if you tell a story like this at a bar, you know that you're like giving it the razzle-dazzle, right?
You're adding that door click, you're making it a plastic bag instead of a tub or where maybe not intentionally.
You're making it a plastic bag instead of a tub or where maybe not intentionally, but you're doing that because you're on the stage of storytelling, right? And that is what people do.
Like we have, there are studies that show that like storytellers who went from town to town in ancient, you know, agent Mesopotamia or agent Greece would change their story every single time.
But when you asked them what they had told,
they said it was always the same.
This is literally how we talk about the live shows.
Yeah.
We say we tell the same story every time
and in theory we do, but it's different every single time.
Yeah, exactly.
But the thing is before, if you are an oral storyteller, you are not writing your story down and then reading from a script, you are telling it based on what you remember. And our memories are faulty. So it's not necessarily true that, like,alked at in the initial response to this story was people being like, you lied.
Like you intentionally told us an urban legend as a tale.
And I'm like, no, I mean, it's my fault that I bought this story, like hook,
light and sinker upon being told it.
But I didn't intentionally, we didn't intentionally include it in the podcast
because we thought we could pull a ruse over people, right?
Like we included it because we were like, this is nuts.
Yeah, it was so funny.
It was one of my first experiences working on the show.
I had just been hired as a big assistant producer and I was helping find, you know,
the, the, like sort through the submissions for that episode.
And I remember after it came out and we started to see all the comments, like,
I felt so bad. I was like, oh, I thought I was supposed to be more savvy. Like, I wish I had
recognized this. Like, I wanted to make a good impression at this job. But now Alex and Kelsey
are going to think that I don't know anything. Okay, but like, the licked hand is a perfect urban
legend that like, goes into this category. I don't know the story. Oh, she's OK.
Let me fucking.
OK, so the Licked Hand is a horror story.
It is also called The Doggy Lick or Humans Can Lick 2.
Ew.
Depending on where you hear it.
It is a very, very common slumber party horror story
because it is about like a young girl
who is at home with her dog and she hears on the radio
and she's maybe blind in the story
and she hears on the radio that like there's a killer
on the loose and the dog is like licking her hand
to comfort her.
And then by the end of the story,
she realizes it's not a dog, Right? Like, oh my God.
Yeah. But this is like a very common
what's scary urban legend.
I think it was told.
Hold on one second.
Humans can lick too.
It's been found in print editions as early as the 1980s.
But like I heard it when I was a kid growing up
and thought it happened in Texas,
because somebody told it at our slumber party.
I'm pretty sure it's told on an episode of the L-word also.
How?
So that's another level, right?
That once something is told in a popular media
consumptive option, it just enters your consciousness
and lives there, right? And you don't really know where it came from.
Something I'm kind of wondering is, I'm wondering about that feeling of letdown
when you realize that the story has been out there. Yeah. And like a lot of the people we've talked to have said
that they had this moment of disappointment when they heard or they realized that like
other people had heard the story before or that they were not the people who were relaying
it for the first time. Interestingly, I didn't really have that feeling when this came out.
My response was more of a like, oh, that's interesting.
And I'm like really curious about this.
But I feel like I wanna talk about
that response of disappointment.
And like, what is it that we're actually hoping to get
when we're telling these stories or engaging with them
that we're not getting when we find out that the story has been in the world before.
Hmm.
I mean, Jay, you said that you felt kind of bad.
Do you feel like you felt disappointed?
Well, I think there were two layers of that.
One of them was just like, did I just mark myself as super naive or did I do something
bad to the show, like the job side of things
that I shouldn't have been worried about
because y'all have been extremely nice
the whole time that I've worked here.
And then there was the side of it where,
like before the episode came out,
like after I had like listened to all these submissions
and I was like on a high of just like
main landing all this gossip,
I went to a brewery with some friends and like I
told them the poop story. I was like, I listened to this today. Like, it's a banger. Like, I want to,
I want to share. And I have never like followed up with them and like admitted like what happened.
That was just like, I hope, hope they didn't see the Instagram comments. Well, does it feel different to you?
Like, does that do you feel like you need to follow up with them?
Because from my perspective, I'm like, they still got the experience of a good story.
Like what, you know what I mean?
Oh, I mean, I had a great time, you know, like they really, they were laughing so much.
I was so pleased with myself.
I think the part that I lost was the feeling of having told somebody a secret.
Yeah.
I guess if there being like an inside and an outside to the story and like,
right, the feeling of being on the inside of something was gone.
Yeah. So I was going to say that I think there are like two things at play here, right? And the first is like,
what are you trying to get out of telling the story, right? Like, there is a version of telling
this story that is like buying a lottery ticket to have a conversation about what you would do with
it, right? Where you're just like, I'm going to prompt everyone at this table by giving you this
story, and we're going gonna discuss it, right?
And that is the value I'm bringing, right?
And when you do that, if that is your intention
in sharing it, it doesn't matter
if it's an urban legend or not, right?
Because you have presented a story
and everyone freaks out, and then you discuss
with ways she could have done better, right?
You moralize the decisions that she made,
and that's the intention of it.
The value is equal in the moment of telling the story.
Exactly.
And this is why a big toilet would love it,
because the answer is, yes.
Flumming.
But I think that you're right, Jay.
I think that disappointment comes from the use of gossip
to create divisions between people, right?
Which is, I know this information
that other people don't know.
And if everyone knows it, then it holds less value.
Yeah, right?
And so I think it depends on like how you approach
the gossip itself.
Like, are you using it to draw people closer to you?
Because if you're using this story as a way
to make people trust you more, and then you're using this story as a way to make people trust
you more, and then it turns out to be an urban legend, you're in trouble.
Wow, Kelsey, feeling really exposed in my Scorpio spidery tendencies right now.
That is an issue with gossip storytelling, right? It's like sometimes you do it as an
intention to like bring people in, because sharing a secret makes people closer. Yeah.
So it's like you've created an in group and an out group.
And if it is revealed that the story you told is actually everywhere, then you didn't bring
anyone closer to you, right?
They will drift away again.
So I think that's part of the disappointment.
I also think it is frustrating to realize that a story you know, something you thought
was yours and special
is actually everyone's, right?
Like in the same way that like,
I mean, we used to make fun of quote unquote hipsters
for doing this with music and like the 2010s
where it was like, oh, are you mad
that the band that you like is popular enough
to afford their rent?
But it was like, no, what they were mad at
is that it wasn't theirs anymore, right?
That it was everyone's.
And that the minute something you loved becomes for everyone,
it changes.
And so I think there's something of that there too, right?
It's like, I thought I had this special little story
that I told my friends where she scooped it out with a ladle
and put it in a tub of remarks.
And now I have to question whether or not that's true.
Right.
And like, I do, I would be disappointed too if I thought it was my special little story.
That's such a good point.
And it's like something that brings me to the, to the really nihilistic place of life.
Well, nothing is truly ours.
If I know a story that didn't happen to me,
then like so many other people know this story too already.
And it like, you know, what does it matter, man?
And now I'm gonna go smoke weed in a field
for the rest of the week.
Okay, bye.
Have fun girl.
We'll miss you.
Don't take me with you.
No, I think you're right, though.
I don't think it's nihilistic to say,
it doesn't matter if the story is true or not,
and it doesn't matter where it happened,
because the enjoyment of the story
doesn't come from the fact.
Nothing in this story means that it had to have been in America.
If you don't lose anything from learning that it was in England or Canada or could have been anywhere,
like we have heard this from multiple sources that it was around as early as the early aughts,
which means that like over the course of 30 years, don't you think that it's possible that this happened to more than one person?
Right?
That's so exciting.
It doesn't like, it's a horror story, but it's not the kind of horror story that is like so specific and so unique that it's not replicable.
Yeah.
No, it's so true.
And as we were chasing different leads for this story, like Alex had to pull me
back because I was going down some weird rabbit holes.
Like somebody was like,
there was an episode of Chelsea Lately, you know,
with Olivia Wilde.
Oh, do not bring Chelsea Lately into this.
I was like going into the archives,
trying to find this episode, couldn't find it.
And then, you know, I was finding other articles
of like somebody getting stuck in a window
because she was trying to throw some poop outside.
It just felt like there were a lot of echoes of this story out there or or just poop stories in
general, like ranging from news articles to other urban legends.
I don't know. I think a lot about like things that are like. And one of them is making music and dancing.
It's very silly when someone is dancing
as to try and persuade someone to do something else,
because it's like, oh, ha, ha, it's so weird to be a person.
You're doing a dance to try and convince your sister
to come to the club with you.
Is that going to work?
But I feel that way about storytelling too,
where it's like, this is something that like, only we do.
Like, telling stories verbally is something
that like only humans can do that we know of.
And so like, there's something kind of beautiful to me
about the idea that this story is iterating and echoing and like changing in
different spheres because like, yeah, that's how it works, right? Like that's in the same way that
like you see similarities between the Bible and the Norse gods and the, you know, the Torah. And
you see similarities in all storytelling all the time because there's only so many stories and so many people
and like things are just the same everywhere at all times.
Just like.
Jesus.
I'm sober, incredibly.
Thank you.
Well, in conclusion, make sure to take your probiotics.
Mm-hmm, yeah.
In conclusion, yeah, what other conclusions are there here?
We don't care if it's true, but also if it happened to you,
you do care a little bit, please tell us.
Yeah, and if you find yourself in this situation,
I really think a fireman would help you.
I really think a fireman would burst down that door. Yeah. Also, I feel like you could really get past this by just being honest.
Do not go home. Do not open your door.
Let me go in first. I did something really embarrassing and just own it.
And you don't have to tell them yet. You can tell them eventually.
Yeah.
And I think if you own that, that's fine.
That's beautiful.
Wow.
Thank you so much for bringing this to me.
It was terrifying and delightful.
It was our pleasure.
Little peasant in a tupperware.
A little tree.
Oh, God.
I mean, unwrap this single use bag.
What's in here?
Jesus.
Thank you so much for listening to Normal Gossip. A huge
thank you to everyone who was willing to talk to us about the
poop story, especially Lizzie, Tori, Jin, Prichard, McDonald
and Adrian Parks. If you have a gossip story to share with us,
you can email us at normal gossip at defector.com,
especially if you are the person who put the poop into the Tupperware single use bag or
zip lock.
Or you can leave us a voicemail at 2679gossip.
If you love this podcast and want to support us, become a friend or a friend of a friend
at supportnormalgossip.com.
You can follow the show on Instagram and TikTok at atnormalgossip. You can follow me on all social media at atmikinni-kelsey.
This episode was produced by J. Tolviere.
Alex Sujan Loughlin is defectors, supervising producer and Normal Gossip's co-creator.
Justin Ellis is defectors' projects editor.
Jasper Wang and Sean Koon are defectors' business guys.
Tom Le is our editor-in-chief.
Abigail Stiegel is our intern.
Dan McQuade runs our merch store,
which you can find at normalgossip.store.
Tara Jacoby designed our show art.
Thank you to the rest of the defector staff.
Defector is a collectively owned subscriber base
media company and Normal Gossip is a proud member
of Radio Topia.
Normal Gossip is hosted by me, Kelsey McKinney,
and please remember, you did not hear this from me.
I am so excited to share that our fellow Radio Topia show,
The Stoop, is back with a new season.
In case you didn't know, The Stoop is a place
to hear vulnerable stories that highlight
the history of blackness through history,
storytelling, experts, and opinions. There is no conversation
that's too difficult to be told. Host Leela and Hana are award-winning storytellers and
journalists. And this season, it's all about black love. But we're not talking love stories.
We're talking stories about traveling alone, obsessions, black love scenes in film, and breaking down the generational patterns
that keep people stuck.
It's all love on the stoop,
as they celebrate their 100th episode
by deconstructing love.
Join them every other Thursday,
wherever you get your podcasts,
and follow them on Instagram at the Stoop Podcast.
Radio Tapia. From PRX. Instagram at the Stoop Podcast.