Reply All - #45 The Rainbow Pug

Episode Date: November 10, 2015

This week, Jade Davis loses her dog on the internet, and we go looking for it. After you listen to the episode, here is a place to visit: http://rainbowpugs.limo  Learn more about your ad choices. Vi...sit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:05 From Gimlet, this is Reply All. I'm PJ Vote. And this week, we're doing a segment we call Super Tech Support. Super Tech Support happens when someone is having a problem with their internet, and we try to fix it for them. Today, we are Super Tech supporting a woman named Jade Davis. She's an academic who I follow online. Usually, she posts about stuff like the ethical questions raised by self-driving cars, or the importance of carefully understanding all the legal agreements that you agree to whenever you're updating your iTunes or whatever.
Starting point is 00:00:41 That's actually a huge pet peeve at first. terms of service agreements. But the other night, I saw her tweet something very different. She was saying that her dog had been kidnapped by the internet. How could this be possible? How could the internet steal somebody's dog? I messaged Jade and I asked her if we could talk on the phone just to find out how this could have possibly happened.
Starting point is 00:01:00 And what emerged was a much larger story about how hopelessly impossible it can be for people to communicate, particularly when they're using the internet, the tool that is, in theory, is supposed to help with communication. So the story starts with Jade's pug, Schneider. I've seen pictures of him. He's 11 years old, but he still sort of looks like a puppy. He's small and gray and cute. And Jade, of course, loves him.
Starting point is 00:01:23 She says that he's more emotionally complex than your typical pug. The first time I had to leave him out for an extended period of time, I gave him extra dog treats because I felt so guilty about leaving him alone. And when I came home, he hadn't eaten any of the dog treats. and he came out of his kennel with a dog street and gave it to me. Schneider can even be mildly psychic. When Jaden and Justin got married and started having kids, Schneider seemed to know that Jade was pregnant before either of them did.
Starting point is 00:01:53 He'd crawl up on top of her and lie on her stomach. Jades had Schneider since he was a puppy. He was there before she had kids, back when her husband was just her boyfriend. She always thought she'd have him until he died. The events that led to Schneider's pug-napping started this past summer. Jade had just moved from North Carolina to New Jersey with her family. So, backstory, I've had one of the worst summers of my life. What happened?
Starting point is 00:02:19 So shortly after we got here, I'm estranged from my father, but he died. And then we were trying to get somebody to get his ventures to my grandmother. And there was another child from like a one-night stand, and there was a fight over his body. and then a fight over the stenchers. So Jade is fighting with this woman who she doesn't really know over her dead dad's dentures. And at the same time,
Starting point is 00:02:48 her maternal grandparents both have terminal illnesses. Her grandmother has end-stage liver failure. Her grandfather has end-stage heart failure. And because their kids are sick and Jade's the oldest grandchild, it's her responsibility to really help take care of them. And then on top of all that,
Starting point is 00:03:05 she and her husband and their two kids have just done this big move for a new job, which is good, but the job doesn't cover relocation expenses. So in the summer where everything's going wrong, they're also broke. And if that's not enough, there's this problem with Schneider. The folds in Schneider's face often get itchy, and he'll scratch his face by rubbing it against things. But then, one day Schneider's scratching
Starting point is 00:03:28 and somehow catches a piece of his eye and cuts into it a little bit. The cut turns into an ulcer and the ulcer bursts. It's scary. Jade calls a vet and the vet says, no, no, no, get your dog to an animal hospital. And we took him to the animal hospital. They said, no, as I has to be removed and it's going to cost $5,000. Oh. And we just relocated and it was an out-of-pocket relocation so we didn't have the $5,000.
Starting point is 00:03:53 So it was like, it was literally my husband got home at 1 a.m. in the morning because this happened in the middle of the night. And I had to ask them what would happen if we didn't take care of it. and they said it can get infected and he can die. The hospital said that Schneider's injury was getting more dangerous by the hour. So we were running on a very short clock to figure out what our options were to take care of it, and we were also trying to get a second opinion as fast as we could. We had called like five vets, and nobody could see him for a couple of days, and it was like, okay. In the midst of all of this, I'm one of those people that likes to have multiple plans just in case,
Starting point is 00:04:32 like planning out the worst case scenario, so it's not too stressful. full or shocking. Yeah. So I said maybe we should look into a rescue. I know that there are some rescues that can help find you affordable services or have agreements with bets that can help. And the absolute, oh my gosh, I don't want this to happen, but I also don't want him to die,
Starting point is 00:04:51 is we might have to surrender him to a rescue. A thing that I didn't know about dog rescues is they don't just automatically take your dog. You actually have to apply. There's a form you have to fill out and you send in a bunch of information and only then do you find out if your dog is eligible to be surrendered. So on the advice of her friends, Jade and Justin applied to a dog shelter called Curly Tail Pug Rescue.
Starting point is 00:05:15 They haven't decided to surrender their dog. It's more like they're applying to college to make sure that they could get in if they wanted to. Justin fills out the forms. It was such a small thing for my husband to put his name down. And it didn't even ask for two names. It didn't ask if there's anybody else who might own the dog. It's just you agreed to just relinquish this dog. So if one person decides to, like, if they think they're in a position where they need to surrender a dog and there's somebody else involved, if they would just ask, are you really okay with us thinking of over that?
Starting point is 00:05:45 That would be amazing. The irony of this is that Jade has literally stood in front of a classroom full of students and told them to be very careful about anything that they sign online. You know, we do a social media thing. They sign a contract with me saying I understand that by participating in this class, I'm entering a legal agreement with these companies, which is why I know for sure. had I seen that surrender form, my name would not have been on it. And I think it's absolutely crazy that you can give away a dog on the internet with somebody you'd never meet just because you wrote your name on a sheet of paper. That seems insane.
Starting point is 00:06:27 Because it's Justin filling out the forum and not Jade, he's not thinking too much about what he's possibly agreeing to. Instead, he focuses on this one question that the forum asks. There is a thing that says, why are you giving up this dog? And then there's two asterix. And it says, please answer honestly and openly as we need this information. So we can place this dog in the perfect loving adoptive family.
Starting point is 00:06:52 My husband bless him. He is, I always tell him he's too open with his emotions. Justin writes about how bad things are for the family in that moment. He says he's worried about his kids. He tells them it's not even just Schneider. Their other dog, Napoleon, has cancer, and his health has been worsening. And Justin writes that he says, worried about how their kids would react if both of their dogs died.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Somebody from the shelter immediately emails back, asking for pictures of Schneider. So Justin texts them pictures, and the shelter emails asking if Justin could meet a shelter volunteer at a cracker barrel an hour and a half away. And somehow, very suddenly, Jade and Justin's backup plan has become their actual plan. 1 a.m. Saturday morning, they'd been at the hospital, and now it's Sunday afternoon, and they're packing Schneider up into the car with his toys and his towels. And it's only then that Jade realizes, oh, We're really doing this. We're surrendering our pug.
Starting point is 00:07:46 But then they're at the cracker barrel, and they're giving him over to a different rescue that the first rescue had recommended because this different rescue has a really good eye specialist they know, and they hand their dog to this woman named Kathy, and it's done. Schneider's gone. Two days later, Justin sends an email asking how Schneider's doing,
Starting point is 00:08:05 and they get back really great news. They said, Justin, I took him to the eye specialist yesterday, and the eye is getting better every day. day. There is no need for the eye to be removed. I just have to keep putting eye drops every day for the rest of his life. He is a very sweet and loving pug. He was such a good boy during the eye exam, then to my vet to get rabies and heartworm tests, which is negative. Which is amazing, because they can't afford a $5,000 eye surgery for their pug, but they can definitely afford eye drops for their pug. And it's only been a few days. So as long as the shelter doesn't mind giving their dog back,
Starting point is 00:08:37 Schneider can come back home. My husband wrote back, I hate to be like this, but if that's the case, Is there any way we can get him back? We weren't in a position to pay for a surgery, which the vet assured us needed to be done, but we certainly can manage to give him eye drops every day. Please, he's been a part of our family for 10 years and giving him up was the hardest thing to ever think of doing. Please let me know. I'm sorry. And how did they respond to that?
Starting point is 00:09:00 Justin, I'm sorry. I know it was a very hard decision for you to make, but he had a meet and greet on Sunday and is going to his forever home tonight. He will be with another dog and a mom and a dad. He's going to a great home. Take care. My husband wrote back, we're a great home. He's our family. We gave him up to to save, to try to save his life. But it turns out we just went to the wrong bet in an emergency. We're losing a member of our family because we got told the wrong thing by the vet. Why can't we fix this? Part of the reason Justin's so adamant about trying to get Schneider back
Starting point is 00:09:29 is because of his kids. One of their sons is eight and struggles with clinical depression. When he gets upset, it's hard for him to communicate with people. And so he'll rely on Schneider. He will just be in a ball, bawling, and he won't want me. around, he won't want my husband around, he won't want his brother around, but he will ask for the dogs. And so I was worried about how he was going to react to all of this. I was sort of panicky. I called the woman to try to explain the situation, and she hung up on me. Lots of emails fly back and forth. And pretty soon the shelter writes to tell Justin and Jade to stop calling and to stop emailing. They're done communicating. Justin writes back. He says,
Starting point is 00:10:12 Please just don't give our dog away yet. Let us at least see if we have legal options first. And then they get this other email. It's an angry one. It's from a man who says that he's a lawyer, but that he's not officially representing either of the two shelters. He does say he knows them. The lawyer writes to tell them they have no legal right to Schneider.
Starting point is 00:10:32 The dog that for 11 years they've thought of as theirs. There's lots of all caps. Animals are property by law, and you transferred ownership, plain and simple, Once again, all, and all is in all caps. The personal problems you outlined while sounding quite overwhelming are of no bearing on this particular matter. The lawyer then writes out how this is all supposed to work, in a tone that to Jade feels pretty condescending. How about this example? You had a $20 gold piece or a dog that you donated to a charitable organization thinking it was worth $20 or would cost a lot of money to take care of.
Starting point is 00:11:11 but after you donated it, parentheses surrendered it. When appraised by the organization, in parentheses taken to event examined, it was found to be very rare and actually worth thousands, in parentheses, or would have only cost you very little to care for. Now, just because you were mistaken as to the actual value in parentheses or cost to you of the donation, surrender, and this is in all caps, it does not mean you get it back. No one coerced you or tricked you,
Starting point is 00:11:40 Justin on his own sought out a rescue organization and knew what it meant to surrender the animal. See the logic and the lack of legal claim, I doubt it, but that's the way this plays out. It's sad that you now regret your or perhaps just Justin's hasty decision, but you still have no legal basis for recovery. Since I'm sure you still disagree, sue for a return, but don't be surprised by a negative outcome. How'd you feel when you got that? I was angry. Did you see a difference between your dog and a car? Yes, and I think most people do.
Starting point is 00:12:14 It's sort of like... Comparing a dog to a coin? Yes. So let's use another example of this. Like, so it's property. So you have a dog and a bracelet. I say it's a paper bracelet. It's a really nice bracelet, though.
Starting point is 00:12:30 If I light the bracelet on fire, it's okay. But if I light the dog on fire, that's illegal. They're not the same thing. What do you think is going on here? It can't be that Cruella DeVille runs the pug rescue. Like, you know what I mean? I mean, that's a lovely thought, but at this point I wouldn't be surprised. If the shelter looks like Cruella DeVille is because that's the story that their paper trail is telling.
Starting point is 00:12:57 Jade and Justin have said one thing over and over. We asked you for help, but it turns out we don't need it. Please give us back our dog. And in return, they've heard a litany of contradictory things. none of them particularly reassuring. Your dog is in peril. Your dog is fine. Your dog can't be given back.
Starting point is 00:13:15 Your dog is a coin. Your dog is property. But it's not your property. Stop calling us. Jade talks to a lawyer who tells her that she can't afford legal help. And Jade knows there's nothing left to say to the people at the shelter.
Starting point is 00:13:29 So the only thing she can do is try to adjust to this new reality where the Internet's taken her dog. And she can go online and post about it. She says she's managing okay. She lost it once. When her son, who likes to play with this app called Auto Rap that lets you make auto-tuned rap songs,
Starting point is 00:13:45 he made this song about how he and Jade still miss Schneider. He's saying Mommy Miss Schneider and I Love You Show. He's saying Mommy Mrs. Schneider, and I shall miss you. At this wrong with shop, because Mom will miss Schneider and I love you know you show. Who-hoo, let's listen to know and I shall miss you. At this point, I shall miss you. At this point, I felt really frustrated. And so I went to the person who I go to when I'm frustrated.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Alex Goldman. So you want to go get these guys? I want to find out what's going on. I want to find out that they're just well-meaning people. Who did something bad? Who, like, didn't handle something sensitively. Yeah. But also, if they're like a shady, like, you know, puppy store or whatever, like, I'd like to know that too.
Starting point is 00:14:34 And if it's solvable, I want it solved. This is a lot harder than just telling me. people to restart their computers. Oh, I know. That's what I want to hand it off to you. How do you feel about it? Well, you want to hand this off to me, I think, not because this is harder than restarting their computers, but because you know that, like, my sense of fairness, like, my sense
Starting point is 00:14:53 that the world should be fair is, like, miscalibrated to the point where, like, I'm furious whenever something doesn't happen exactly the way it's supposed to. Yeah, and you're also just very good at, like, there was a point where you were sending your rent to an escrow account for, like, you're just a point where you were sending your rent to an escrow account for like seven months because you're in a dispute with your landlord. I am persistent. I just mean you have a sense of, like, I have a sense of outrage, but I also have a very short attention span.
Starting point is 00:15:16 So I'm like, this won't stand. I forgot about it. But like, you will chase it to the end of the earth. Okay. Well, let's get to work. After the break, I step in and try and untangle this mess. Welcome back to the show. So once PJ put me on the case of Jade's missing pug, I dug in.
Starting point is 00:15:44 And the first thing I did is just, to confirm that these two dog rescues that jade had made contact with were legit and not some fly-by-night pug-napping dog resale outlets and they're both real rescues i saw the tax documents next i tried calling kathy the woman who jade and justin had surrendered their dog to she runs a rescue called the pug's unlimited give shelter i was hoping she could help me understand what was going on i left kathy a bunch of messages sent her a ton of emails but she was a total brick wall no response And I couldn't figure out why she would stonewall. So my last step was to try and reach out to the original pug rescue that Jane Justin contacted,
Starting point is 00:16:24 the one whose surrender form they'd filled out. It's called Curly Tail Pug Rescue. The shelter's intake coordinator sent me some terse and annoyed emails. She just seemed exhausted by this entire line of discussion. At one point, she told me I was beating a dead horse. I went back into the studio and read PJ some of the emails from the shelter folks. They're saying, like, look, you made a deal. you sign an agreement, those are the rules.
Starting point is 00:16:47 And we can't break them for anybody. I hate when people say those are the rules because it's like, we'll change the rules. Like you made the rules. I felt like I was swimming in circles, but remember, I'm nothing if not persistent. And finally, after weeks of emailing, I was able to reach someone
Starting point is 00:17:02 who could actually answer some questions for me. Hello. Hi, is this Drea? Yes, speaking. This is Alex Goldman. How are you? Oh, good. How are you doing? This is Drea Peters, the director of Curly Tail Pump. rescue. The rescue whose surrender form
Starting point is 00:17:17 Justin filled out. And right away, I just wanted to know if Dreia empathized with Jaden Justin. They obviously really love this dog. This was obviously a very difficult thing for them to surrender the dog. I mean, do you feel that from
Starting point is 00:17:32 Jade and Justin who had to give the dog up? Listen, it's usually a rescue group can tell. Someone who truly cares about their animal that's going through a heartbreaking decision and people who are real flippin about their animals to render. And that's not the case with Shiner's family. They definitely had a difficult time with this, and they're going through a lot. However, unfortunately, when people allow their
Starting point is 00:18:01 emotions to take control, it's very hard for healthy and constructive communication to continue because there are a lot of crazy people out there. And rescues all operate on a shoestring. And so, Kathy, I guarantee she's one of the sweetest women would just be willing to protect her organizations who really none of us have some big financial backing. We rely on the support from our donors to keep going. So if there is someone that was maybe argumentative or threatening various things, which I know what's happening in this case, you basically have to cut them off. There's no point in engaging or continuing communication.
Starting point is 00:18:41 It can only hurt the rescue. And there it is. Remember when Jade's husband Justin wrote that thing in his email asking Kathy not to put the dog in a permanent home until they could explore legal options? Those words, legal options, were all it took. Kathy completely shut down. And here's why.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Drea told me about a case that happened last year in Long Island. A pug was found wandering, dehydrated, and emaciated, and it was taken in by Dreya's rescue. And then, Dreia heard from a woman named Patty, and she was angry. Patty, our mom. of Holbrook is battling for Bubba, her 16-year-old pug, who she says got out of her backyard and was turned over to a pug rescue group. I love my pug and I want him back.
Starting point is 00:19:25 But the group Curly Tail pug rescue is accusing our mind of neglecting Bubba. They accuse me of not feeding my dog. They accuse me of starving my dog. These people are cuckoo. You can hear how upset this woman Patty is, but Dreia says that in trying to save the dog's life and do it by the book, they got pulled into this confusing morass. We had absolutely no proof or documentation provided that this even was the owner.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Right. The picture of the animal that was sent to us from the owner looked nothing like the animal in our care. And it became an excruciating legal case in the major drain on my organization that almost put us out of business. In the end, Drea's organization was cleared of any wrongdoing. The dog was placed in a good home. But the experience took a huge toll. Their rescue, as well as their fundraising, ground to a halt. One of their volunteers was even arrested for a minute.
Starting point is 00:20:14 To Drea, the whole thing was a total nightmare. She says this is what Kathy must have had on her mind when she read the words legal options in Justin's email. And that's why when Schneider's condition worsened, she didn't get in touch with Justin and Jade. His eye treatment didn't work, which is what we were all afraid of. And he did need to have his eye anucleated. Enucleated means removed. Schneider did have to have his eye taken out. So the original treatment in plan of action,
Starting point is 00:20:44 did come to the past, even despite our best effort. So at this point, he's a happy, healthy, obese is one-eyed dog, but there's no difference between him any end-a-dog at the point. But a lot of the confusion comes from an initial email that Kathy sent, which just said Schneider just needs eye drops for the rest of his life. Honestly, I probably wouldn't have even had that conversation because it gets people's hopes up in a highly emotionally charged situation. Right.
Starting point is 00:21:12 I usually wait to have more finite information and then communicate any change if there is any. At this point in the conversation, I started to see this whole thing differently. And I put myself in Kathy's shoes. I'm not the person who negotiated the dog's surrender. My friend did that. I just got this adorable dog with an injured eye that could kill it. And I want to save its life.
Starting point is 00:21:36 And then I realized that it won't need surgery. So why wouldn't I want to share that good news? You know, Kathy, I know is 100% well as well. attending. But that's usually what gets us in trouble as rescuers. We're like, oh, we think I'm delivering you good news. He doesn't need this horrible surgery. But unfortunately, that's what ends up fighting us is thinking we're being helpful and you just don't know. It's a wildcard. You don't know who you're dealing with on the other side of the line, really. Even if I, let's say, one of my volunteers made that mistake and communicated prematurely, even if that happens, if
Starting point is 00:22:14 Shade had communicated appropriately. I don't believe it would have escalated quite so severely. Okay, so yeah, this all escalated pretty severely. Kathy actually kept Schneider back from the family he'd been placed with because of this threat of legal action. But this is the point where I started to get hopeful about this whole mess, because I could see how it could all get fixed. I knew where the communication had broken down, I'd reestablish contact, and now Schneider was healthy again. And he would obviously be happier back with Jade and Justin. So couldn't you just go back home?
Starting point is 00:22:46 Yeah, I could easily answer this. Okay. Absolutely not. And his happiness is not the only thing at stake here. And I get what you're saying. Of course, he'd be happier with his family than being rehomed. Right. I mean, that's not a question.
Starting point is 00:23:01 But at the end of the day, we are rescue people. We're rescue organizations. We are not charities for people. We're charities for animals. And here's the thing, says Dreia. are a totally unique problem. They have been bred over generations to have huge eyes, tiny tails, little legs,
Starting point is 00:23:21 all of which make them much cuter to people, but it gives them a host of medical issues. Trouble breathing, knee problems, eye ulcers, their bodies are constantly threatening to break down. And oftentimes the owners are unprepared to take care of these issues when they arise. So when Drea and Kathy received these dogs, it's kind of like getting soldiers off the battlefield.
Starting point is 00:23:41 They need to be stabilized. And the rescues are so focused on that one job that they simply cannot engage all of the personal circumstances of the families who are surrendering the dogs. And if you give one animal back because you think dogs are going to be happier with his owners who couldn't pay for medical care, how do you decide I'm going to do it for this case but not the other?
Starting point is 00:24:03 To me, Jade and Justin seem like great owners. But when Drea looks at the surrender form that Justin signed, the form where he poured his heart out, She's is a home that looks too chaotic to take good care of this dog. Even though they had trying times, Schneider's family didn't talk about finding alternatives. They didn't get the second opinion. And even though their child who has clinical depression and is very attached to their dog, they did not try to find every possible alternative to surrender.
Starting point is 00:24:37 I talked to Drea for an hour. I made several arguments for why Schneider should come home. but I wasn't able to convince her. It seemed clear that Schneider is not going home to Jade and Justin. But Drea really did strike me as a good, caring person. She cares about this dog and their family, and she feels for Jade. And she extended an olive branch. Well, and listen, especially as a rescue person,
Starting point is 00:25:03 and I mean as sincerely as I did from the get-go, if there is a way that I can somehow provide peace to an owner, I'd be happy to even act at the potential go-between to send her an update and pictures. and things, anything, because I know that she has gone through horrific extenuating details in her personal life. And if there's anything that I can do to help, I totally would. I was never able to get Kathy on the phone, but I did get a glimpse of how she felt about
Starting point is 00:25:31 this whole thing. At one point, she accidentally C-Ced me on an email that she meant to send to Drea. In it, she thanked Drea for all the help with Schneider. And then she goes on to say, all we want is what's best for him, and I get angina. Hi, Jade. Yes. So a few days later, I called Jade to give her the news about Schneider. I wasn't looking forward to telling her that we couldn't get her dog back.
Starting point is 00:25:58 And that, contrary to what she believed, he wasn't with a family. He was with Kathy. And he'd had his eye removed. In fact, like, the eyedrops didn't work. And he did end up meeting the surgery. Okay. Which is much different than the email. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:26:14 And so they sent that email. And basically, from their perspective, what happened was, like, they sent the email. and she's like, she's just like a, she's like a, she's one person who I think is kind of, when, when your husband email back and just said like, you know, just so, like, please don't give the dog away, we want to solve this first, like we want to look into our legal options. She got terrified that she was going to get sued and basically just like went to ground totally out of fear, I think. Okay. I mean, I, if the lives of communication had been open and she had said, I've misinformed you. And, like I said, here's the information for the doctor or anything. It would have avoided a lot of this. So, I mean, I do understand being scared.
Starting point is 00:27:05 And I think he needed the surgery. So he was in a position where we wouldn't have been able to do anything. So he was where he needed to be. But the emotional turmoil on both ends seems like it was unnecessary. Yeah. To just disregard that the human is experiencing an emotional loss seems a little bit crazy. Of course it does, particularly if you are that human experiencing that emotional loss. I try to explain Dreya and Kathy's worldview to Jade how to them the entire point of what they're doing is only for the dog's benefit.
Starting point is 00:27:47 That saving those dogs is the mission that Drea and Kathy have taken on, and it's a really difficult mission. And Jade completely understood that. She just also completely disagreed with it. She thinks the whole reason that people care about pugs is because of human feelings. It's totally this weird imaginary relationship of mutual love that just sort of takes over a part of your life. It's sort of magical. Yeah, it's just weird. I feel like you guys are so close in how you see this and also so far away.
Starting point is 00:28:26 I think humans are horrible. in many ways. Like, I truly do. That's the truth. I do. But I'm not completely hopeless. And I feel like the stance that they're taking is a hopeless one.
Starting point is 00:28:39 Jade says, my family had a bad year, but things are getting better. And the sheltered people just won't let themselves see that. But there's something about the way they're thinking about the dogs and the people
Starting point is 00:28:49 and the way they're talking about the dogs and the people that was just, you are undeserving of being a part of this animal's life. So clearly Jade is still hurting, but she's also come to accept that Schneider's gone. And she said that her family's actually adjusted in a really surprising way. Schneider has become a trickster because that's his personality from now.
Starting point is 00:29:13 When things are missing from the house, the boys say maybe Schneider took it, which is, it's very cute. You know, occasionally the boys say that we want Schneider back. And I think when we had the first. interview, I was at the point where if he could come home, maybe if he comes home, it would be okay. But, I mean, I've bonded with dogs. So I also understand, even if somebody just got a dog, when you first have the dog, you have that rush of oxytocin and all of that other wonderful stuff that dogs do. Like, I literally call my dog's, my mini-oxytocin factories. And I wouldn't
Starting point is 00:29:54 want to take that away from somebody. Like, it's true. If he's happy, it's fine. I feel like we failed you, man. You didn't fail me. You didn't fail me. I'm really, really, really, really ecstatic that he was somewhere that was able to take care of him. Really? Yes. That's why we surrendered him in the first place.
Starting point is 00:30:19 They said they would be able to do that, and they did. Would you want, I mean, Drea said that she can send, like, pictures and updates of Schneider. Would that be helpful or unhelpful? It might be unhelpful, so it's something I would need to think about. Just because right now, with how things went and the lack of communication, Schneider gets to be like this pug saint over the family. And if he becomes real again, he becomes real again. And I don't know if that would be helpful or not at this point.
Starting point is 00:30:54 Yeah. Yeah. You guys have actually made a good, I mean, the best thing, be him, but you guys have done a good job of making a good imaginary relationship in his absence. Thank you. Thank you. And now the imaginary relationship gets to go on with him being happy for the rest of his life. We will keep going until we'll shiner. And the world can be full of rainbow pugs and it'll be great. What are rainbow pugs? It's like when you close your eyes and you dream that you're in a Lisa Frank painting that is full of pugs.
Starting point is 00:31:32 That's what happened when I close my eyes. Lots of little Schneider's. Because he's happy. I imagine him like happy and looking like a pirate now. I think I had this fantasy where I was going to call you and I'd be like, I've got an update. I'm outside your house in a motorcycle and there's a little sidecar and Schneider's in it. So you also had an imaginary relationship with Schneider. Yeah, I totally did.
Starting point is 00:31:58 That's wonderful. Thank you for, you did help. You opened up the line of communication that was cut off so that we know what happened. And that's really, there's not a price that I can put on that. It's not like the $20 gold coin, the lawyer found in the street. At least there's definitely one villain in this story. Yes, there is a real villain in the story. I'm sorry, stuff's so hard.
Starting point is 00:32:28 Oh, it's really, I promise it's not hard. I just hate email a bit more. Yeah, that's actually the other villain. Like, email is a villain in this story. Yeah. Because there was no phone conversations about any of this. It was all just emails. Emails on, like, terms of service agreements.
Starting point is 00:32:47 It's like the least humane ways people talk to each other. Yes. Are you going to tell your kids? No, when they're older. Yeah. It's still going to be the Great Pug Heist of 2015. I think that is, yeah. You guys need, like,
Starting point is 00:33:11 a commissioned portrait. Like a very regal one where maybe he looks piraty, but he looks like, I don't know, very noble and like beneficiary's looking over. Or it could be done in the style of Lisa Frank. With rainbows? Yes. A rainbow pirate hug. That would be actually really cool.
Starting point is 00:33:31 Okay. All right. Bye. Bye. One last thing. Jade, if you're hearing this, we got you a small present. it is waiting for you at rainbow pugs.limo. Reply all's hosted by PJ Vote and me, Alex Goldman.
Starting point is 00:33:58 We were produced this week by Tim Howard, Truthy Pinamineni, and Fia Benin. Our editor is Peter Clowny. Happy birthday, Peter. Production assistance from Kalila Holt. We were mixed by Rick Kwan. Special thanks to Mel Young. Our theme music is by the mysterious breakmaster cylinder,
Starting point is 00:34:14 and our ad music is by build buildings. Matt Lieber is a rope swing over a pond. You can find more episodes at iTunes.com slash replyall. Our website is replyall.com. Thanks for listening. We'll see you next week.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.