It's two thirty five am in a wide body chet somewhere over the Pacific Ocean, and you're listening to Night Call. Hello, and welcome to night Call, a podcast to keep you company on the strange days and loomi nights. My name is Emily Oshida. I am once again here in Los Angeles. You can't keep me away, and I am joined as ever by Molly Lambert and Tesse Lynch. Of course helloo, and of course I'm Tsolnch. Sure, I'm sure we're back together in the same room. I have just gotten off
a plane from New York. It is about one thirty PM as we record this, and I woke up at local time one thirty am. So I'm just like you're in the langal Ears, which is the themes we're in a We're in an air air airflight, airflight, Yes, air flight, an aerospace travel themed episode. Um yeah, it's I feel like I've been on a zillion planes recently. I've watched a lot of succession. As I was telling Molly in tests, that's now my my plane show. So, um, have you
guys seen the langle Ears. I've never seen the Langoliers. I think I read it a long time ago, dude. The TV movie of the Langle Ears is so good and scary. It's basically a minute. Uh it's a lot of things that they then ripped off for both Stranger Things and just some other monsters, like the Stranger Things monsters or the monsters are amazing because the Langaliers are like so the Langoliers of the Stephen King book about people, my boyfriend got me to watch because he remembered he
would watched I think when it was on Originally. It's so scary. It's like you fall asleep on a plane and then you wake up and like almost all the people are gone except for you and a few people, and then those people try to find out what happened, like what is going on? Um, there's like nobody flying the plane or something, and basically it's like they like went in a time loop. But the Langliers are these like they're described as just like giant like dust balls
that roam through space, just like eating spacetime. So they're like not sentent, they're just things. There's sort of yeah, they're sort of like tumbleweeds that like eat everything, like like space time tumbleweeds. Yeah, it's really good and I recommend it to everybody and eisode and I also like those. I I went back and watched all those eighties Stephen
King like TV movie series events like The Stands. Yeah, I just saw the rebooting it uh original The stand nineties TV movie to that, I feel like I'm I'm now entering the right head space for that. I don't know, it's like such a dark spot for me, all those Stephen King TV movies. I also watched the It one recently before the came out. Yeah, they're good, and they're all like a you know, there before whatever we call
like the golden age of TV. But they're interesting in that it's like, yeah, it's good to make something that's like four or six parts sometimes Yeah, yeah, that's a good length. Do you guys remember Merlin? Did you watch it was an five part things? Or I feel like we mostly missed the real golden era of like part series. Yeah, but although I mean, I feel like it's kind of exists now. Like half the things that we like as
shows are actually considered mini series now. But that's because now everything is like they sell it as a mini series and then if it does well, they make another season. And it's a show like a little less or American crime story. But well we can talk about that about that, yeah yeah, um wait first real quick before we get into the meat of the show. I just wanted to share my recent experiences. Um, I guess in the same vein as as food moods. Uh, what's what's what's the good?
What's the good? Fast fashion? Fash fashion? Fast fashion? We really need to come up with a tune for it. It can't be your recurring segments. At the end of the show, we'll have figured it out. Can it be the hot pocket song? Fast fashion? Um? I had to kill some time recently and soho uh and was walking up Broadway and decided to go into some stores I've never been in before, but it always just walked by.
I think I just consider everything around there to be something that I can't afford, or it's just like I'm not in the market force, so I'm not going to go in or I'm not interested. But I went into a Noritia and I tweeted about this, which is like the most mystifying like women is fashion. It's like it is fast fashion, I guess, but it's oddly expensive. Molly looked it up and apparently it's Canadian. It's from Vancouver, And then somebody tweeted us and said they have like
crazy sample sales in Vancouver. People mobs like like an arena. It's like the Barneys of Canada. But it's like really like that that's saying something that's bad, Like you're saying, like the clothes are kind of like H and M E. So yeah, but there's like no you can walk into a lot of stories like that and kind of be like who's the and other stories girl, who's the coast girl to pick my two favorite like Scandinavian semi fast fast fashion brands, and you kind of have a sense
of it. But this is just like all over the place. Everything, it's just like everything fabrics are they working with? Are we talking like synthetics? So there's a lot of wool blends, like wool synthetic blends, but they kind of just feel synthetic. And so when you pick them up and see that the sweater costs like a hundred and fifty or a hundred and eighty dollars, you're like, oh, wow, this is
not what I thought I was working with here. It's fancy theme, but it's just there's something kind of ai ish about walking through the store, and like it has these weird little like tone poems on the tags that feel like they were written by a bot. Uh, it's very odd. I did not buy anything from Aritzia. And then I went to this other store called um Berkshire.
So how do you. I can't remember if it's Berkshire or I thinks um, and I had thought again, this is like some Zara screw maybe more expensive type store. It is the cheapest store I've ever It's it's cheaper than Forever One. Not really, but it's but it's so cheap and there's so much of it, and it's much more like youth oriented, Like it feels kind of like going into a wet seal in the nineties. They're all these like loose sight blocks that say, like we celebrate
the dancers. But everything was kind of nonfunctional in the store. Most of the mannequins were undressed and there was just like a mess inside and it kind of really fell to find out Fall of the Empire, Like I know, I when I got really obsessed with the fash in
the other sense, fast fashion of Brandy Melville. Oh yeah, one opened to the Americana, and then I found out that they are like size one, size one size only, and the size is small, and it's like if you don't fit it, you can't shop there, which is so shitty. And then I just like, but I went into the store just to like see what the stuff looks like, and I was so nearly. First of all, they had a lot of stuff where the branding was Los Angeles a weird guy. I was like, now I'm already thinking
about fascism. But then literally one of the tags on one of their sub labels is called John Galt. Oh we Oh you told me about that? I think I remember this, And I was just like, you guys, like this is like they're they're telling us, But it's like the style of clothes is like a girl in a
country music video. Yeah, it's basically abercrom. It's like a lot of like skinny, like distressed jeans and plaid shirts that you're supposed to wear like unbuttoned down to Like it's not even like a cool, scary fashion kid where you're like, oh, of course I'm scared to shop there, but it would all the clothes would look really good if you had a platinum blond blow out, the official
hairstyle of female fashion. That's the look. Sorry to generalize here, So we have a lot of calls and they're all real. This week a night column, We're gonna Yeah. We had a lot of responses to our discussion about Velvet almost had Velvet gold Mine, which is a great movie, but not the movie we're talking about. Yeah, oh my god. Yeah, I was thinking I watched a Bohemian Rhapsody recently and it just made me wish I was watching Velvet gold
Mine instead. Like I feel like the theme of movies I've been seen recently is it's a lot more fun to like watch the fictionalized version with where it's like not dependent on depicting real life events, so you can be like it's an artist kind of like David Bowie are kind of like a glam rocker, but not have to like go through every single bullet in the Wikipedia article.
But anyway, Yeah, Velvet Velvet buzz Saw, which now feels like it's been five years since it came out, but it did get a lot of good responses to us about killer art and yeah, yeah, and the and the intersection thereof I was also saying that I went to the l a Art Freeze and that it was exactly like Velvet buzz Saw, to the point that I was like, is it even parody? It's just representation the man. They had silly like sculptures. There was a giant like catchup
bottle Paul McCarthy pop Art is Back. Baby. It was cool because it was as tall as the water tower.
It was so dull. It was like, oh my god, this just reminds me of like, did you guys read this is still one of the most memorable New Yorker profiles to me, the profile of um of Scooter Braun in The New Yorker where the reporter just like followed him around going to all these like shitty pop art galleries in Los Angeles and like buying art for his home, just like the worst stuff, the worst like faux Banksy
type stuff. Uh yeah, I will just say that as I walked into the art fair, the guy in front of me was wearing a full Adida's jumpsuit and a cowboy hat. That's a good look kind of well. I respect and sun conc respect being in places where everybody is like look at me, look at me, because then you never feel bad about people watching because they're like, I want to give you permission, they give you permission.
But then I was also like, get me out of here, and um, well, we had two emails, two separate emails about the Denver International Airport d I A d I E another d I A. We could kick it off with Christo A at the d E A. Let's let's read Christina's who who writes to us saying, so when you guys were talking about velvet buzz saw and art that kills people, I was immediately reminded of the demonic blue horse overseeing protecting the Denver Airport, which killed its
own God damn creator was the Denver Airport ever addressed on the pod forgive me if I've forgotten. I get absorbed in the Stargate apocalyptic femus shelter theories now and then, And while I don't necessarily believe these stories, one cannot deny that there is something wrong with the Denver Airport. Okay, by for now? Um yes, the blue Mustang Blue Suffer. So Blue Suffer is thirty two ft tall and nine thousand and nine thousand pounds, I believe, So that's already
like just not to really right. Somehow there's something very big. It is made of fiberglass and uh it's yeah, it killed its creator. He had just finished the head and it fell on him in his studio and then his friends and family and staff finished it for him against what may have been their better judgment. But Denver Airport is also is just a mess, you guys. I didn't know any of this about Denver. I do want to talk about Denver air Airport for sure, because there's so
much stuff going on there. But I want to encourage our listeners to look up a picture picture. He has glowing red it's glowing red eyes. Oh god, it looks it looks like something from hell. And the head like it greets you at the airport when you're coming You might eat coming over with a lot of anxiety reaching the gates of Hell. Yeah, there's something very ghostbusters about the veins on is he's sort of blue tinted the picture and on Wikipedia it's at night, so he's like illuminated.
So he is blue. I mean, it's beautiful, is it? It's pretty metal. It's sort of it looks like something at the beginning of like um, like a distributor or production company logo at the beginning of them, like yeah, yeah, it's like a TriStar horse and it's very dramatic. So it was installed in two thousand and eight, so it's pretty. But this is just the tip of the iceberg for ice ice ferd iceberg. Yeah, it's totally angler. Did you
guys know about Denver International Airport? So crazy, super weird? It has anyone been there? I have? I don't. I feel like I went before all the weird stuff with her, except like, obviously the runway thing must have been there for a while. Well, let's back up to let people know that that one of the conspiracy theories is that the run ways are in the shape of swastia, which is kind of liked people are like, only if you really look to see that shape? Are they that way?
You want to see a swastica in the way that all rectangular knots can sometimes be turned into swasticas swasticas are taking rectangular or not? Yes, yeah, And also like yeah, I mean it's like from an aerial view. Almost bought some bed sheets on sale the other day that then I was like, you know, this pattern is a little it's also like the ceiling canners is a little swastika. Well yeah, anyway, my my friend Caleb, they got married in a and his wife Mary got married in a
place in uh Chatsworth. That is a building you can rent that's owned by the city. That's really cool. But it's like an old, an old timey California house and it is so old that it has a bunch of swastikas as a motif in one part because its um and for the wedding they heard them all with post it notes and it was very chy. Wow. You think that they would get those were placed if they were
renting out the places of venue. I think it's part there, like it's a historical and there was like a time when it was trendy to put them in things because they were like it was a trend for like, oh Eastern mysticism. But besides the swastikas on the runways, there's also there are gargoyles by a baggage claim. There are secret bunkers. Apparently there are some murals that people think are like tales of the Apocalypse. Um. And at some point a CEO took over Denver Airport and decided to
like kind of play enjoy it. There are conspiracy theories, and so they kind of showcased some of the theories, but not like the swastikas right um for instance. But yeah, people know how long until right? Yeah? Um. People also think there's like some kind of Freemason's connection, and there's a lot of like right wing conspiracies about like lizard people and the bunkers and stuff. It's it's an interesting,
interesting rabbit by Denver. I don't know. I think I've gone through a couple of times, but I did get stuck there for an extended period of time when I was pretty young, like when I was eleven or twelve, traveling alone. Yes, I was traveling alone, So I really remember the Denver Airport from that. I remember the smell of the Denver Airport really really riding cycle down the hallway, yeah kind of. It was before cell phones too, so I had to like use the pay phone to call
my mom and check in with her. It must have been before all this, at least the stuff that's really on the surface, because now they have like because of the CEO who took it over, they have all these ads that are like there's something like strange going on in Denver and like pictures of aliens and stuff on the like light up like billboard advertising spaces. Um, it's very yeah have you seen these? No? Oh, my god, seen I saw when I started looking at it. But
I started looking this morning. I was like, this is very strange. Feel like somebody sent us something about those ads a while ago. But then I don't know if we read it on air, but now you know, yeah, yeah, yeah, clearly where we will go to the Denver Airport. The CEO Kim Day hit us up right at the point where like, we would love a glamorous trip to the Denver airports and a hotel on the outskirts of the airport. If they have one that's like you come true on site,
that would be great. What did it smell like? Um, it's a smell I associate with like other kids houses. It's other kids house, another kid house. Every once and all, I'll smell something like that. And think of the Denver Airport. I wonder if it's milled. It's sort of mildewing. Yeah, it's a little musty. There are there other haunted airports, have you guys? Ever, this isn't about haunted airports. But it's one of my favorite airport related ephemera things. The
Carpets for Airports website. Oh yeah, we're just documents all the different carpet patterns and people write little essays about the carpets on it. Please look it up. It is such a good website. What is it Carpets for Airport stock Com. I think it's yeah, and they play it's like this sort of live globe, like a three D sort of so you can kind of spin it around and then pick a different airport. Like yeah, but you know who co runs this website. Hugh Dancing, the actor
Hugh Dancing. I'm yeah, this is a no no, Like I think it's him and somebody else. That's amazing. Yeah, but it's it's so good, And then it really makes you anytime you're at an airport, like look down at the at the carpet and think like this was a choice because of course, all these big institutional places, there's nothing that's not thought about in them as far as like you know, just like creating, like a yeah, because
it's all meant to like pacify like the environment. What is the longest you've ever been trapped in an airport. Oh my god, so long I I spent I think it was like eighteen hours or something in Philadelphia and college where it was one of the things where they
keep delaying the flight incrementally so that they wouldn't like. Yeah, and that was also pre it wasn't pre cell phones, but it was so long that eventually we were just like using pay phones because UM and my friends we were coming back from spring break and I had pneumonia. It was really horrible, and all I wanted was a cheese steak because I was like, I'm in Philadelphia. Even
the airport will have a cheese steak. It was like we got there and everything was about to close, and then nothing was serving cheese steaks until after we had left. It was a nightmare. That's brutal. But I don't know I was. I recently had like a layer where I knew about that was long. That was something like six or eight hours in Minneapolis. But yeah, I feel like there must have been other ones that were longer that I've blocked from memory, that were accidental, like where I
just got stuck. Believe Dallas Sport Worth is my most hated airport. Yeah, makes sense, that's that one that's its own city. It's its own city, and like that was one where I probably got stuck out for the longest, and it made me realize just like we'll never be able to live in space, because no matter how big you make the biodome, it's never going to be big enough. And you just want to be outside so bad. I have to say that I could stay at Logan in
Boston for a long time. I love the Logan Airport. They have illegal seafoods. Like I'm just very fond of Boston in general and feel very at home there. I found the people very nice. I could have chilled there forever. Philadelphia was not. Yeah, I've been to the Yeah, I've been to all these airports. I can't remember. I must not have spent long enough in them to make an impression. They all do blend together, and that sort of placelessness
is what makes them sort of nightmare places. Yeah, so, guys, getting back to the nightcalls real quick. I'm just going to read an excerpt from the other night email that we got regarding um lucifer. Regarding blucifer Um, this one comes from Austin. They mentioned the fact that a lot of people want Blucifer removed, but he says, he or she says. The whole killer art thing is of course very sad, but it's fascinating too. It's easy to read
into into it as an idea of our artistic hubris. Also, it is how the Kim Contral movie Mannequins should have ended. I'm from Colorado originally, and on reading the Wikipedia article was surprised to learn that it was only erected when I was in college. It feels as essential to d I A As our conspiracies about lizard people living in the tunnels underneath the airport, which of course are part
of the branding of the food court renovations. There. Wait, are they suggesting that the mannequin should have killed the guy at the end? Because I agree? I mean, yeah, that's all of a sudden a much better movie. Yeah. Yeah, I guess the thing that's troubling about them leaning into the leanto well, yeah, like a guy was murdered for one, and to like again goes against this entire thing about
like the pacifying nature. You're not supposed to be thinking about anything creepy because it's so close to being creepy already. It's about plane crashes on movie they do they yeah all still and now in this day, especially after nine eleven, they did yeah. But then I feel like they just always do. They just take out the mentions of it because they're like, don't think about it. I UM, I feel like I'm a connoisseur at this point of the safety videos of different airlines, um, which are the more
more troubling, the more cute they try to be? UM. I don't know if you guys are a flu Virgin America r I P. But the vague like musical Number one, which was their last safety video before they I think they shut down, uh that one with like yeah, because it has like a rap in the middle of it. It has like robot dancers. That horrible, but then there's still like you're still a woman putting an oxygen mask on a small child as their plane plummets. I always thought, yeah,
oh of course. I always felt like Virgin America's vibe was like not not right. Well for that the reason that it's like not soothing. It was sort of like it's a party plane and that's like pane. I like the purple lights, that's it. I didn't even like that
it was like made me feel a little gellow. Well it also had the thing of, um, it had the thing of the messaging between the seats like that too, because right, yeah, yeah, but that always like it felt like it was given to you with kind of a wink of like hey, like you can go say hi to that sexy someone in row thirty two. But somebody on Twitter recently posted that, uh, I think it was on a plane. I'm pretty sure it was on a plane.
And it was like the diet Coke was the beverage sponsor or something, and so the napkins that they gave out a drink said like here's a space to write your number down for somebody. Uh, which is like it was not received. Well, no, it was not received. Well I mean like again, like it's the thing of like it used to be fun to to be on planes, and you used to get horny on planes. Now I can't think of a less horny not look at those bathrooms. The Mile High Club makes so much more sense if
you're thinking of like a two story play. Yeah, because speaking of terrible flights, now getting more into air travel, not so much air airports. Um, we have this call from Matt, who writes us saying, after listening to test talk about air travel in the most recent episode, I was reminded of a story a teacher told our class about a ghost the night call memory connection, seen by
a flight attendant on an Eastern Airlines flight. All I could recall was that the ghost appeared in the oven used to warm up meals and warn the f A about a potential fire. I think f A. I did some light googling and sure enough found that story and several others about the ghost of flight four oh one.
The short story is the Eastern four oh one crashed into the Everglades in nineteen seventy two, and the pilots of the flight were spotted multiple times by several witnesses over the following years, especially on planes that had been fitted with parts salvaged from the crash. Eastern eventually had to remove all of those parts and the sighting stopped. I hope you found this as interesting as and spooky as I found it. Love the pod oh boy. So news to me that you can use salvaged parts from
a crashed plane. Such a bad idea, Such a bad idea. This is a totally new story to me, I've never heard of any of this before. This is wild. So yeah, this this plane crashed in the Everlades two and the pilot's name was Bob Loft and the flight engineer's name was Don Ripo, which all so like, how can they be real? Come on? Um? So they were two of the people who died. There were a hundred and one people who died, and then you know, I think something
like between like thirty and seventy survivors. So it was the weirdest thing reading about this is that there were people who would call the flight attendants over on flights that were in planes with the salvage parts, and they'd be like, there's a woman sitting next to me and her like her eyes are closed and she looks very sick. And then the flight attendant would come over and there'd be no one there, or they'd say like a man
just came over and started talking to me. And these were these people were credible, like they say, I don't remember where he read this, but it said um. Although Eastern Airlines refuses to discuss the matter, researchers have interviewed numerous individuals claiming to have encountered the ill fated pair that the Loft and Repo on L ten eleven's. As the reports would have it, Loft and Repo have devoted their afterlives to watching over the passengers and crew of
the planes, and the testimonies are extremely persuasive. Many come from people in highly responsible positions, pilots, flight officers, even a vice president of Eastern Airlines who allegedly spoke with a captain he assumed was in charge of the flight before recognizing him as the late Loft. Apparently, like they say things sometimes like the apparitions will be like I will never let another crash happen, or like I will protect this play. Founds like they're friendly ghost to know,
they're very friendly good ghosts. Yeah, it's just like, yeah, it's one of those things. The more credible it is, the more it's like, oh, a person who's probably like as on the straight and narrow as you can possibly be. In response to our plants having ghosts questions, somebody said, oh, I thought your question was do plants have ghosts? And then they were like, the ghosts are the oxygen that they make that we all breathe, breathing. It's the singularity
all explosion. Uh yeah, no, this the plane thing is so, when is the last time that people were having sightings of this? There's is it mostly? Are there any reports recently? That's a good question. I thought that the reports stopped after they removed the salvaged parts, but maybe not. Also, Eastern Airlines doesn't exist any Was it only Eastern Airlines flights that were haunted or was it like may have
been the just particular type of plane. I think it was mostly Eastern though It's it's hard because it's all kind of collected on these websites that are like you just really want to believe the story, but they're not super specific. But it was other eastern Eastern. Yeah. Yeah, it'd be so psyched to have like a good ghost on the airplane keeping it up that plane, good gremlin on the way. Yeah. I don't make Molly text me before I fly to keep the plane up. She does it?
Keep it up with my thought? Yep. Well, speaking of plants having feelings, I think that we got a nightcall about a plant. I'm not sure it's paranormal. It's probably static electricity. For one time, I was walking in a carpeted area and I was near a plant and the plant leaf unfurled, shocked me, and then furled back up again. That was a negative experience with plants. Probably wasn't paranormal, but you never know. By it was very excited to hear this because I don't know if you guys know
about the quote unquote sensitive plant, the mimosa. Oh yeah, yeah, okay, I'm obsessed with the sensitive plant. Do you know about this plant? Tell me it looks like a fern kind of um, it's really pretty. It's a very delicate plant and if you touch it or stroke it, it like um. But it's interesting because it's like not totally underst like it's it doesn't really protect it from predator. And it's not it's not a carnivorous plant either. It's no, it's not.
It's a plan. They had them at home depot and they were marketing them as emo plants, and I was like, and then it died. Yes, I think it probably was like I put it where the jasmine, where it was just sitting on the ledge right above the jasmine that died. Just saying I definitely think plants can think and feel, and there's footage of like plants doing things in kind of slowly. But I remember seeing somebody in a documentary of a plant like it was like a parasitic plant.
It went up to other plants and it could recognize whether it was in their family or not. And if it wasn't their family, it would be like nope, and like move on and then eat some other plant instead. But yeah, it was amazing. I wonder what plant that was. I will find out. I used to. I did a post about it once a million years ago. The salt
just reminds me of like Poison Ivy from from I know. Yeah, I just love she's like a good eco terrorist, right, she just wants plants to rule the world again, which I really noble Molly, what happens to us? No human extination project. I love Poison Ivy and I love anytime there's like a monster or villain of the week on sailor moon that's like like plant oriented because it's always like a little like creepy vine that'll like monsters are
scary little shop of horror, so terrifying. Yeah, it's really terrifying. I have this problem where when I start thinking about if plants have souls and sea ghosts and can hear and stuff because I adopt a lot of plants. Like, if anyone's giving away a plan, I'll just like automatically take it. But then you run into a problem because you need eventually to like get rid of some plants, to take care of the ants that need more space, and to just like give away your plans and then
they come back. Yeah, a little toaster, throw me away, don't get rid of an object. It's kind of shocking there hasn't been a Pixar movie about this, Like we feel sad about it. He just cooked up soide cooking with fire. I feel like that's all. Like any time I'm just like dunking on Pixar, it's just like thinking of the next anthemomorphic thing. It can make you feel
bad about what about women? Yeah, no that will never happen, but yeah, it's like I feel like their entire business model is like making you feel bad about, like imagine feelings on things that don't feeling well. That's kind of like why I feel like the time was right for Marie Condo is because it's been so many years of anthropomorphizing objects and she's like, great, they are they do have souls and feelings but now you just tell them
to go away. I saw a good argument for her that was saying that it was all Shinto is m, where it was like, yeah, all your stuff does have a soul, and that's why you thank you, thank you, bid it goodbye. Fine. The interesting thing in Japan is that like people don't um like like used stuff or
like take your stuff to second hand stores. Is kind of like a more recent phenomenon because people just don't generally buy secondhand stuff because they like because of the sort of Shinto beliefs of like the energy and like the previous life it's had. Um But I think people are doing it now more just because of the economy, but like but because of like also the people in
view this the stuff in their objects. People take really really good care of their stuff, so like, if you do go to a second hand store, it tends to be really good condition. But I feel like we could use a little more of that in our culture. I'm kind of into the idea of getting something secondhand and getting an influx of other vibes. The only problem is being able to like read a vibe not strong suit necessarily.
I don't know. I feel like I have a pretty good read on vibes of clothes, like like where you can picture the clothes having been Maybe it's like worse for like harder objects, but softer objects that are more absorbent. I feel like I can read the Yeah, I mean almost all the clothes i'd buyre you, so I'd better be good at reading. Have you ever had a haunted
clothing item? I think I have. Yeah, I had a really I had a jacket that I lost at a nightclub in Providence, Rhode Island, and uh, it's that jacket. That jacket was a second hand jacket. It was like it was from um I think the store was called Ragtime and it was on their street. And I remember like I got it and then it just like it kept falling off the hangar and I was like that's and I'd like zip it up, and the zipper would
kind of slide down and fall off the hangar. And then eventually I lost it and felt like it like wanted to leave, so I just let it go. But it did have a bunch of cash in it, which I was very I mean, that's such a dick move of a jacket. But I feel like coats tend to have them hold onto the most. I think so maybe things because you well also you wear coats so much more than you wear any other one article of clothings except for maybe jeans. Well, I have a coat that's
come into my life that was not pre owned. But I like, I have a coat now that I did not pay for that I feel like maybe has some bad juju on it because of the way that I I acquired it. You explained it to me, and it's fine, it's fine, but I feel I didn't take it from anybody gave it, gave it to me, but it's like it's like I don't know, it's like a yeah anyway, but but I also feel guilty that you didn't like earn it with your brain. But it's fine, it's fine,
but other weirder way. But I also picked up a jacket once at um at bar Stella, like a few years ago when I lived here, and I tried to I tried to return it back to the bar and they were like like like, we don't have any idea you should just like hang on to that person hasn't been here in this jacket is bar was never here.
But I so I had I like they were just like you should just keep the coat, and so I had it, but then I just got this really bad feeling about the coat, like I shouldn't it fit me and it looked it was like not a coat I wouldn't wear, but I just didn't. I felt like I should not have it. So I think I gave it to somebody else. I know, uh, it chased them, but yeah,
I don't know. Now I'm thinking about the Sopranos episode about a jacket, which one there's one where somebody gives Tony a jacket and then finds out that he's like gave it away. Oh, I do kind of this. What kind of jacket was it was a jacket? Yeah, it's like something he would never wear. And then it's like he sees the guy sees like Tony's made wearing it or something. Yeah, coats have baggage. Man also purses. Yeah, definitely had some secondhand purses that were not meant to
stay with me. It's really hard to get rid of purses. It's impossible. I go through a change persons all the time. I mean, do you throw them away? I just buy cheap ones and then when they wear them through, which I always do. I just move on. Well, I move on from them, but I think I find it hard to give them away, Like it's a very it's such a touchy thing. Mine gets so gross. I'm just ashamed. I don't want to be like I had this. This
person didn't wear lots. It was in pretty good condition and I had to get rid of a bunch of stuff because I was having some kind of like panic
induced move or whatever. And I remember leaving a box of stuff outside of out of the closet, like when I was like driving this U haul truck and then like rounding the corner and like a homeless person had already picked up the purse and it was like walking off with it, and it was like the it was like seeing like yourself like from it was like that makes me feel really good, Like I feel like somebody should do that. I sometimes just leave stuff out, yeah,
where I'm like somebody will take it. But having you ever left something big out and then watch does no one take? And like a couch out And I was like, oh was that? She was like, you don't want it. It's been in the rain for like three weeks and
it's so like somebody will use it. No, But people do curb alerts and then like you can see people kind of slow down and look at the couch and be like, nah, somebody left of copy and now like water log copy of Art of War outside of my like that was there as of the time that I left, uh the other day, curb alert outside and I kept want you to take a picture, and then it was so cold that now, like it gets so cold out
that my phone just just shuts down. And so I was going to take a picture of it for Instagram and just say somebody lost, but then it was not meant to be. Uh yeah, anyway, take care of your stuff and then and then sure that it has a
good home. Don't waste stuff. And if you have a story about a haunted object, a bad juju, item of clothing, or anything else sensitive plants, weird plane flights, please give us a call at two four oh four six night We do not have any kind of personalized outgoing greeting. Leave your message anyway, that's the right number. You can also email us at Night Call Podcast at gmail dot com. And while you're at it, you may want to follow
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