The Binge Crimes: Night Shift - Devil in the Ditch I The Aftermath with Larrison Cambell
Episode Date: June 24, 2024One year after the release of Witnessed: Devil in the Ditch, host Larrison Campbell travels back to Greenville, Mississippi to explore the aftermath of telling a personal, family story. Unlock al...l episodes of Witnessed: Devil in the Ditch, ad-free, right now by subscribing to The Binge. Plus, get binge access to brand new stories dropping on the first of every month — that’s all episodes, all at once, all ad-free. Just click ‘Subscribe’ on the top of the  Witnessed: Devil in the Ditch show page on Apple Podcasts or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access wherever you get your podcasts. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts and @campside_media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey folks, today we're bringing you a special bonus episode of Witnessed, Devil in the Ditch.
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Dr. Miracle. It's just these homilies. You don't even recognize the people. And then they say,
would you like to say something? Would you like to say something? Are you out of your mind? People
just don't get up in funerals and say things. That's right, y'all.
We're back in Greenville, Mississippi, with a bonus episode of Witnessed, Devil in the Ditch.
I'm here talking with old friend and arbiter of funeral etiquette, Gayden Metcalf.
If you listened to the first eight episodes of this show,
you'll remember she has some strong opinions on the do's and don'ts of funerals.
Anyway, at Hank's funeral, it was a traditional, beautiful funeral with beautiful music,
standing room only. There was no funky music. They did have one guitar player, but, you know,
nothing else.
Gayden and I caught up about nine months after Devil in the Ditch was released.
Since this podcast came out, there's a question I've been getting a lot.
How does publicly telling a private story about your family and your friends in your hometown affect, well, your family and your friends in your hometown?
Gayden seemed like the obvious place to start, since there isn't a whisper in Greenville
that she doesn't hear.
I don't know if I told you this on the email that I sent you, but, Gayden, you were a fan
favorite.
Oh, get out of here.
Which is, I'm serious.
Like, did you, I mean, what did you hear in Greenville? Did anybody reach out to you about
hearing you in it? Oh, absolutely. In fact, I told your father, I said, I have just come back
from the UK where some fella sent Gayden a text. That's her daughter, little Gayden. And asked if
she would take my picture on the phone and send it to his wife who was sick.
And she was listening to the podcast.
He said it would just literally make her day.
And I went, like, a picture of me?
He said, yeah.
I thought, oh, I felt like a star.
I thought, oh, my heavens.
By the way, she sent it.
So what are people saying then?
I mean, because I do think that there was probably a pretty common theory in Greenville as to what happened to my grandmother.
Do you think this changed anybody's mind about that?
No, no, no, no, no.
You know people in Greenville don't change their minds very often.
And they were all convinced that, you know, who was the culprit.
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That's JESSE20 for 20% off. At first, I was kind of surprised to hear that this podcast hadn't opened the minds of Greenville at large when it comes to my grandmother's murder.
But if there's one thing Greenville has always done, it's stay on the side of a good story.
And a family fight about a wedding brunch so dramatic that it allegedly leads to murder?
Well, that was a good one. My friends from Chicago who
listened to it, they have only been to Greenville, Mississippi to visit, and I drove he and his wife
by the house. I have taken several tours. Was that since the podcast? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But do you know that since your podcast, I say that I have seen Richard three times.
Now, some of that possibly has to do with Charlotte's death.
A reminder, Richard is a pseudonym I gave my cousin,
the guy who lots of people in Greenville, and my own family, have accused of having something to do with Precious' murder.
Although there is no evidence to support that.
And Charlotte is the pseudonym I gave his mother, who was Precious' sister.
She died a year and a half ago while we were making this podcast.
How often did you see Richard before this?
Are you seeing him less now?
Oh, absolutely.
Far, far less.
Far, far less.
You know, I would see Richard driving Charlotte no more.
I don't see him in his car ever.
Had Richard been hiding out, avoiding the scrutiny?
I get a knot in my stomach at the thought. I tried hard to be fair to everyone, but especially Richard. Well, I think
you were extremely fair. I mean, I think you went overboard in the fair department. I think if
anyone, any comment that I heard was like, I think they wanted you to say, he did it, we know he did it, but the charges were not pressed.
I can't say that I think for sure that he did it.
Like, there's zero evidence that he did it.
Like, there's no actual evidence that he was there.
And so, you know. Who else would have done it
with the little evidence that you have? Somebody blew in off the street.
Just blew in off the street. Blew in off the street, absolutely.
Hit your grandmother on the head and covered her face.
You know, at least online, one of the common theories is that it was Charlotte, actually, who did it.
I mean, is that something that has trickled into the, you know—
No.
Into the Greenville water?
No, not at all. Not at all.
I mean, I just don't think that they could conceive that a member of the Garden Club of America would do that.
Maybe Greenville people can't conceive of it.
But in the months since the podcast came out, from people outside of Greenville, that may be the theory I hear the most.
Gayden, too.
She tells me that's what the friend who'd asked her to drive him around town thought.
Yeah, he thought that of course Charlotte did it. Who else would have done it? Were there any other parts of the story that
you had thoughts about that you wanted to talk about more? Anything, you know, that you heard
in the podcast or that you didn't hear in the podcast? I was completely satisfied. I'm just waiting for you to come forth with what you think now,
how you have progressed since the podcast.
What have your feelings been?
What have your emotions been like?
I mean, truthfully, I wish I felt like—
I mean, the reason I didn't have more of a resolution in the podcast is because I didn't feel any sense of resolution.
I think I went into this thinking, okay, there has to be a smoking gun somewhere.
There has to be something that gets me at least like a little beyond what the investigation turned up.
And then, I don't know.
Honestly, I thought you were being careful, and whether you like it or not,
that you were going back to your roots and to your DNA,
and you were not going to be the poor bird that founds its own nest.
That whether you liked it or not, that came out.
That you're a nice girl from a nice family
and you were not going to be the bad bird.
How does your aunt, Ann, how has she taken it?
We haven't talked a lot since it came out.
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Truth is, whether or not people in Greenville thought this podcast was anything to be upset over,
I've been worried it was. I got a lot of messages after it came out,
but in the flurry of communication, there were conspicuous
absences. I heard from my dad, of course, and right after the podcast came out, both of his
sisters, who were in several episodes, sent me congratulatory emails. But if they had thoughts
on what was in the podcast, they kept that to themselves. And as for Richard, I was no more clued in on what he thought.
Then in October, I was invited to the Delta Hot Tamale Festival
to do a panel discussion about Devil in the Ditch.
This is, to put it mildly, a longtime dream come true.
There is no bigger event in Greenville, Mississippi than the annual
Hot Tamale Festival, because there is no bigger food in Greenville, Mississippi than the hot
tamale. And what, you may ask, is a hot tamale? Well, it's like a Mexican tamale, but smaller,
thinner, and hotter. For a size comparison, think Cuban cigar.
Then it gets rolled up in a corn husk and simmered in this spicy gravy.
Being asked to be part of the Hot Tamale Festival is pretty damn thrilling. All of downtown Greenville
becomes something of a party for a weekend. There's music and half a dozen city blocks of vendors.
And like all good festivals, this one has a king and a queen.
I was about two Bloody Marys and half a dozen tamales into the event when I ran into this
year's queen.
You look so good.
I love your outfit.
This is our style.
Can I take a picture of you guys?
Yes.
She was wearing this head to toe chambray outfit with a corn husk ruffled trim
and then a crown with a ceramic diorama of the hospital where she worked
that was then surrounded by giant hot tamales.
I was impressed.
And then she said she listened to the show.
Come on from the hospital.
I get in the car and listen to your podcast and just relax.
It was okay.
I was sad when it was over because I had nothing else to listen to.
Thank you so much.
That was so cool.
And I ran into lots of people who wanted to talk about the case.
Can she hear the doorbell if somebody was at the front?
Yeah, she could.
If she was in the backyard, she could hear it?
Oh, no, no, no, no.
She wouldn't be able to hear it, yeah.
I gave that talk about the podcast at the old Levee Board building turned boutique hotel.
It was a full crowd, although, to be fair, the audience for my talk was probably two-thirds my family, friends, and then
family of my friends. At one point, I asked who had known my grandmother, Presh.
Nearly every hand went up. They had questions for me, how I'd gone about approaching my family,
if there had been any breaks in the case, and who I'd spoken to since it had come out.
I was just curious, have you heard from Richard since the podcast aired?
That's the other reason this trip was significant.
I only have one family member left in Greenville, Richard.
And I hadn't heard a word from him since the podcast came out.
I didn't even know if he'd listened.
I had wondered if he would show up to hear me speak.
After all, no one loves a Greenville Civic event more than Richard.
But I didn't see him there.
So I called him up.
He met me in the courtyard of my hotel.
He wore his usual sneakers, old gray sweatpants, and an emerald-colored Greenville t-shirt.
When I complimented him on it,
he reminded me that he'd given me an identical one
back when I'd first interviewed him.
I still had it in my drawer,
though I've never even tried it on.
Just the thought feels too heavy.
But Richard grinned when he saw me,
and I gave him a hug.
As we sat down, I introduced him to my girlfriend, who was there helping me record.
Aiden's just here as my girlfriend, and I was like, I'm going to, but I'm going to make you work now.
We sat on the hotel's outdoor couches and caught up.
Unlike the last time I saw him, he was really relaxed that day.
He said he was fine with my recording our conversation.
But the day was really windy, and I'm not great at tech,
so we ended up not being able to use a lot of the audio anyway.
I did ask him if he'd listen to the show, but he told me he hadn't wanted to pay for it.
So I said it was free. I even volunteered to burn him a CD.
And then he said, well, he actually just didn't really want to hear it. I have to ask,
like, are you, are you okay with the fact that I did this, that I did the podcast?
Yeah, I told you early on. I told you initially. And a lot of the interview sounds like this.
I told you it was really windy. What I really wanted to know, though, was how had this
project affected him? Has anyone treated, do you think people have treated you any differently
since it came out? Yeah. Not at all. And people haven't brought up press or anything.
That's good. I'm glad. I'm really glad. Yeah. And of course, you got to remember everybody from here,
they were part of that experience 20 years ago. After the first few months when it occurred,
I never heard any conversation about it ever again. Yeah, I think you did say that. I mean, because there was no new information.
Something about the conversation that day
opened up a line of communication between us.
Richard started texting me YouTube videos,
of Greenville, of course,
like old footage of the levee,
another of the official Hot Tamale Festival song.
And I started texting him back.
I called to wish him a happy Thanksgiving.
And at Christmas, he sent me pictures
of the Presbyterian church decorated with wreaths.
A few weeks after I got back home,
Richard agreed to another conversation
about his experience with the podcast.
I asked him to think back to the first time
I interviewed him and Charlotte about the murder.
We, no doubt, we tried to actually bring you to the, to that particular time.
You did.
To describe to you what was going on in Greenville, Mississippi back then.
I mean, do you think about all this stuff much now?
No.
Yeah.
No, and sadly, Larissa, when I looked at you
seated in the courtyard that day,
I said,
I said, that's one problem I've got
when I speak with you, that the conversation is always going to come to this particular subject.
Now, I think I told you, don't live in obsession over this,
where the only time I ever think about that day,
way back in 2003,
is whenever anybody brings up the topic to me,
and you're the only person who ever brings up the topic to me, and you're the only person
who ever brings up the topic to me.
He says only a couple of people
have brought up the podcast to him.
One of his friends who lives out of state,
and an old family friend.
He said,
one of your relatives has done a podcast
about your aunt's murder,
and I said, I know. And that's all
that was said about it. And then Nancy Brown called me one day and she said, have you heard
Larrison's work? What'd you tell me though? Well, I mean, you had caught some heat from
some people. When somebody comes to you, you shouldn't have included your family in it.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that was, I mean, for me, like going into this was that by bringing this up, it would negatively affect your life.
By, you know, sort of talking about this again.
No, it hasn't done that at all because it has not been a topic where I live.
It never posed a problem to me as a citizen of Greenville. Why? Because the people of Greenville
knew me. So I think that's the way they actually responded. You know, so much of the, you could say, the attention that was put on you came from people in our family.
What was it like having someone in our family bring this up and then, you know, conclude that any evidence, as it were, didn't exist.
Larrison, I'm a forgiving soul.
I don't understand why your father and why your aunt Anne.
He talks about my dad and his sisters
accusing him of killing Presh.
If it hadn't been you,
I wouldn't have gotten interested in a podcast. sisters accusing him of killing Prash. that you hadn't gotten all this information. I wanted you to have it.
I wanted you to have the full picture.
And then I take it Mama did a hell of a good job talking with you two about what was going on back then.
And I'm sorry that,
well, what information the Greenville Police Department had,
who it was their job to solve the crime,
that they weren't more open with you.
What do you like to do these days?
Well, I miss my family and I miss my friends,
which includes all the people who grew up here.
I hear I sit back in this study
and every night when I go over to turn off my space heater,
I see all these pictures of all these wonderful people.
My grandparents, his parents, all of us cousins.
As I look off into the distance now, I'm looking at that picture of you in your tan overalls.
You've got on a red sweater.
Oh, the school picture, yeah.
We chatted about people we knew in common and Richard's second favorite subject next to Greenville, the Libertarian Party.
Though he told me Robert Kennedy would have his vote in 24.
This, it's really, it's really, really nice getting to chat with you for this, like, long amount of time.
Thank you. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Though I can't say, talking about that negative time, I enjoyed that.
Well, let's think about TV shows then.
Keep sending me TV shows.
I was most nervous to get my dad's opinion on the podcast.
I was worried I'd put him in an awkward position. He's always
been so supportive of anything I've created. But I was concerned that this time, that might be hard
for him. One of the things you said to me when we spoke last year was that I would be criticized for doing this. Have you, has anybody sort of expressed, I think, in the more sort of Southern way of criticizing,
expressed concern about my decision to report on the family?
Not a single person has said that.
Now, have people thought it but not had the nerve to express it even in an indirect
Southern way? You know, that's possible. I think people have been surprised that you were given,
first of all, were given permission by me and my sisters to do this. And then I think people have been surprised that you did it and went through with it.
What I do remember striking me the most, and this was personal to me, and it was your description of when I called you to tell you about Precious' death and how you just burst into tears.
Here's the clip he's talking about.
I'm thinking, look, Larrison, I know this is upsetting, but it's upsetting to me, too, and I want you to get in control of yourself.
You had to start making some decisions about coming to Greenville.
I wasn't sure if you were going to be emotionally able to do what it took to make those arrangements.
I basically said, look, you need to pull yourself together and we've just got to
deal with this. And what I remember about that, and as you said, I was driving and I remember
where I was on the highway when I got you on the phone. You were the first person I called, and I wanted you to be the first person,
but that after you, I then needed to call Martha, and I needed to call Liz,
and then I needed to call my sister Ann, and I needed to call my sister Martha.
And I just, I wasn't looking forward to any of that, and I just wanted to get it over with. And I think that's why, unfortunately,
I think I was anything but sensitive to your needs. And I just, even today, I just feel
terrible about that. I'm sorry. I'm really sorry you feel terrible. I don't want you to. I mean, it was just,
to me, one of the things that I think I really came to an understanding of when I was doing that
was how much you were having to hold together in that moment. And my interpretation,
which could be wrong, is sort of like, look, I'm her son, and I'm the one who's holding it together.
I'm able to make these phone calls. Like, we've all got to hold it together.
Well, that is very kind and really indulgent of you. But I think the fact is that
she was dear to all of us, and I just should have been more sympathetic.
But, you know, looking back on it, I really am surprised that I was not more emotional about the event.
I worry that I've not let myself get emotional. What do you think about the theory
that has really gained a lot of traction since the podcast came out that Charlotte did it?
I'm not inclined to think that Charlotte did it. And I doubt that it was murder in the sense that it was premeditated. You know, my suspicion is that it came about more insidiously than that.
That is, there was a confrontation of some sort.
This doesn't surprise me.
Almost to a one, people who knew Charlotte have trouble imagining that she actually killed her sister
Presh. Now, I said almost to a one because there is always an exception. In this case, my mother.
After she'd heard Charlotte's interview in the podcast, she told me she couldn't shake the idea
that Charlotte was the one with real motive. That Charlotte, even more than Richard, resented Presh,
wanted her to back off once and for all.
I got messages and calls about this too.
People reached out to see if Charlotte
had ever been considered a suspect.
The police never looked at her that way
from what I was told,
but maybe it's worth asking if they should have.
I have trouble picturing Charlotte being
that violent. But when I interviewed Charlotte, she talked a lot about the resentment she felt
for her older sister. And I was struck by how open she was about it. I wanted to ask my aunts,
my dad's sisters, what they thought about this theory. Remember, they both accused Richard of
killing Presh
and Charlotte of covering for him,
although there is no evidence that's true.
But I didn't know if they'd ever considered
whether Charlotte had been involved without Richard.
And we hadn't talked much since the podcast came out.
One of the things that I'm kind of stuck on
is, you know, you have two sisters and they are very different.
And one of them, I think I could have done anything with the podcast and she wouldn't have been supportive.
I think that's true.
I know she wrote me immediately and told me how proud she was.
And I'm pretty sure she listened to it. Do you know at all if Anne ever finished it?
I think she started and said it was too much.
I don't know.
She's never told me.
She's never said she listened to it.
So you don't really know what her overall feelings about the content are then?
I don't.
I expect that there is much in the podcast that she would not have approved of, that she would not have felt good about.
And I completely understand her position on that and respect it.
In some ways, there's no one in the family whose take on Presha's murder is more different from mine than my Aunt Anne's.
When it comes to what happened, she's black and white.
She believes it was Richard.
And I've sort of accepted that I'm going to spend the rest of my life in a gray area.
But in other ways, she and I are so similar. She's the only other person who wasn't afraid to dive
into everything she could get her hands on about Precious Murder. The only other person who can't
quite let it go. And knowing how much she cares scares me. Here's an excerpt of my Aunt Anne in the podcast.
Of all of Precious' kids,
my Aunt Anne pursued Richard the longest.
She's the one who collected
all the investigative documents she could,
those binders I now have.
But it wasn't just collecting.
It's taking notes, doing her own analyses.
Like she wrote up details about Richard.
What I considered a profile, and I sent it to this psychiatrist in Houston,
and I asked him to give me a profile.
What was he really like? What could he do or would do?
And it's excellent what he wrote. Have you read that yet?
I haven't really yet.
I went through the garbage at their house, and I wanted to sample one thing of his handwriting, which I do have.
You got that? Okay, good. And then I just thought, you know, either what Anne's response is or what I'm perceiving her response to be.
It's the one area that I don't feel okay about.
And it's interesting, you know, like I said, I sat down with, you know, our mutual cousin who's a very big part of the podcast yesterday.
And he seems to be okay with it.
But the greatest extent of communication I've had with Anne since then was that I had all of her files in my possession.
And she really, really, really wanted to get them back.
Yeah.
And I did.
I got them back to her and I got them back in good condition and stuff. And I think I'm so worried that she came away from that podcast feeling like she couldn't trust me and wanted to have her things back from me.
That's my interpretation. does not have a positive reaction to the content, I can understand that it's because she did
expend a lot of time and energy and money investigating and trying to get to the bottom
to what she thought was the clear answer to who did it.
I really didn't know how my aunts felt.
After I talked to my dad, I couldn't get that out of my head.
And maybe I'd been avoiding asking them because, like my dad,
I suspected they hadn't loved how I'd told their story,
how I hadn't been able to say Richard was guilty.
Still, they were both so enthusiastic about this podcast when I'd started.
Anne had me to her house in Tennessee, and my Aunt Martha drove down and joined us.
We'd made a whole weekend of it, lots of laughing, great stories.
I'd left Anne's house on a high, so grateful to be a part of this warm,
vibrant group of people, and a presh for teaching us how to grab these moments.
So I reached out to both of them and asked if I could interview them again and see how they felt.
And they both said no. My Aunt Martha did talk with me on the phone,
off the record. On the record, she told me that she'd gotten to a place where it felt more important to focus on Prussia's amazing life. And revisiting this podcast, which was about her
unsolved murder, seemed like a step back. I didn't hear from Anne for a few days.
She was the one I was most worried about. But then I got a text from her. It was really kind.
Like my Aunt Martha, she said she just couldn't go back again to the podcast, that she had to move on from that time. And for a while, I felt good.
Maybe I had managed to do the thing we Southerners are never supposed to do. I'd opened the doors of
my family home. I'd invited people to come take a look. Hell, I'd even narrated the tour.
And it turned out to be okay. But if I'm being honest, that feeling of peace
didn't stick around that long. I decided to tell the story of Prussia's murder as a granddaughter,
yes, but also as a journalist, meaning people would be talking to me because I'm one of them.
But as a journalist, I wouldn't be under any obligation to pick sides
or loyalties. Or maybe that's wishful thinking. When you've always been part of a group,
objectivity, openness, well, maybe it feels like that's the betrayal.
I guess that's another question I'll have to learn to live with.
Because there's something else that Gayden, the local etiquette doyen, said to me during our last conversation that really stuck with me.
You know, that's an interesting part of the Delta.
Everything is always so nice.
You know, everyone, you can go to a dinner party and the food is horrible.
The company's not good.
And you, at the door, you're just, you had the best time.
Thank you so much.
And basically, you know, in our heart of hearts, we're not that nice.
So.
Thanks for tuning in, everyone.
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when people followed the Atkins diet or the South Beach diet to lose weight.
And there was another one that was really big back then, a miracle diet that would not only
slim your waist, but make your body reject diseases. Back to the garden, back to the greens, back to God's butter, avocado.
It was called the alkaline diet, and tons of celebrities toyed with it.
Kate Hudson, Victoria Beckham, Kelly Ripa, even the Queen of Goop, Gwyneth herself.
It involved drinking lots of green juice and not very much else. I dropped weight like crazy, but I wasn't dropping weight where I look haggard like people do when they're on a diet.
The alkaline lifestyle was pioneered by Dr. Robert Young.
Breakfast should start out with a fresh juice.
But Robert Young didn't just promise weight loss.
He promised hope.
He promised a miracle cure.
Sick people, especially cancer patients desperate for that hope, flocked to Dr. Young.
He called it the new biology.
He had a way of making you feel special and like you were on this great crusade.
He just convinced her,
stay the course, follow my protocol.
It works. I've cured cancer.
Like, she was desperate.
She wanted to feel better.
Robert Young's followers called themselves Alcalarians.
I just felt like a father feeling towards him
and Jesus Christ.
That's pretty powerful.
They followed his protocol even
when it made them feel sicker. Her stomach was so distended and I begged and pleaded with her to
stop doing what she was doing. And when patients' illnesses got worse, Robert Young convinced them
they were actually getting better. She had a lump on her chest. It was the size of a golf ball and it was coming out,
kind of like supporting what he was saying, that it can't live in her body.
Dr. Miracle isn't just about a diet. It's about what happens when you follow the wrong guru.
It's about how we choose to treat our illnesses at a time when health care is unaffordable and so many people
doubt science. And it's about the search for truth when everything goes horribly awry.
A good con man is an abrasive. He's a likable guy. He's telling them what they want to hear
and he's saying it with conviction. They're losers. There are people that owe us money.
My mom's sucking on that bottle of greens, and I took it and I fucking threw it at that woman.
And then I said, here's your check. Give me my mother.
Everyone's dying. Why is everyone dying?
From Campside Media, Dorothy Street Pictures, and Sony Music Entertainment,
this is Dr. Miracle, coming July 1st, wherever you get your podcasts.
Witnessed, Devil in the Ditch, is a production of Campside Media and Sony Music Entertainment.
This episode was hosted and reported by me, Larison Campbell.
Lindsay Kilbride is the senior producer.
Studio recording by Ewan Lai-Trumewin and Blake Rook.
Sound design, mixing, and original music by Garrett Tiedemann.
Additional music by APM and Blue Dot Sessions.
Fact-checking by Lane Gerbig.
Special thanks to our operations team.
Doug Slaywin, Destiny Dingle, Ashley Warren, and Sabina Mara.
The executive producers at Campside Media are Vanessa Gregoriotis, Adam Hoff, Matt Scher, and Josh Dean.
If you like the show, please take a minute to rate and review it,
which really does help other people find it.
Thanks for listening.