Hold My Sweet Tea
Where True Crime collides with chilling ghost stories and Southern folklore. Join us, sip sweet tea, and uncover shocking tales of murder, mystery, and the supernatural, all with a healthy dose of Southern charm and a touch of sass!
Hold My Sweet Tea
Ep. 23-Isabelle Blair & Marian Coutee 30 Year Old Cold Case SOLVED!!
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What happens when the person you suspect is guilty walks free for 30 years? The disappearance of Isabelle Blair and Marian Coutee in July 1989 left families devastated and searching for answers that wouldn't come for decades. The timing couldn't have been more suspicious—Isabel had filed for legal separation from her husband, Robert Brunson Blair, just days before she vanished along with her friend who was helping her leave the marriage.
We dive into this cold case that haunted Alexandria, Louisiana for three decades, exploring how investigators were stymied by lack of evidence despite their suspicions about Robert Blair. Though family members knew in their hearts who was responsible, it would take a property sale in 2019 to finally break the case wide open. The discovery of a submerged vehicle in a pond on Blair family land led to the recovery of human remains and ultimately to Robert Blair's arrest at age 71.
The emotional courtroom confrontation between Blair and his victims' families reveals the deep wounds that never healed during those 30 years. Isabelle's daughter faced her mother's killer, who had smiled in their faces for decades while knowing exactly what he had done. Through victim impact statements and the final resolution of the case, we witness how justice, though significantly delayed, finally arrived for Isabelle and Marian. This powerful episode reminds us that some secrets can't stay buried forever, and that persistence in seeking truth can bring closure even when all hope seems lost.
Source Material:
KATC News, Oct. 16, 2019, Arrest made in 30-year-old Alexandria cold case, https://www.katc.com/news/covering-louisiana/arrest-made-in-30-year-old-alexandria-cold-case
Gregory, Melissa, Feb. 12, 2020, Alexandria man gets 40 years for 1989 deaths of wife and friend, https://www.thetowntalk.com/story/news/2020/02/12/alexandria-man-gets-40-years-1989-deaths-wife-and-friend/4737746002/
Buford, Brooke, Oct. 22, 2019, Suspected human remains found could be connected to 1989 cold case, https://www.kalb.com/content/news/Suspected-human-remains-found-could-be-connected-to-1989-cold-case-563650681.html
Photo Credit:
Rapides Parish Sheriff’s Office
Isabel and Marion's Disappearance
Speaker 1Isabel Blair was 34 and her friend Marion Couttie was 31 when they went missing in July of 1989. This is Hold my Sweet Tea. Thank you, good morning, or at least it's morning for me. I'm Pearl.
Speaker 2And I'm Holly and it's cold in here. It is very cold in here. We've got the AC cranking this morning because you never know in the south when it's going to be hot and when it's going to be cold.
Speaker 1And I wore shorts, because it's definitely hot out. That's right, and I haven't worn shorts in I don't even know how long, at least not outside my house. Look my legs are so white, they glow.
Speaker 2Mine too I have a moon tan, same. But I do like your shirt. It's so cute. Oh, thank you. It's a little Salem apothecary shirt. Yeah, we were just talking the other day about maybe booking a little quick trip, a little quick girls trip to Salem A hop, skip and a jump, yes. So if you guys know any good hot spots besides the normal, you know houses and places? Yeah, because I definitely want to go to.
Speaker 1Something a little more obscure.
Speaker 2We would love to know Absolutely. I definitely want to go to Kill Star and I want to go. Because we're going to have to make the best out of like hit the most in the least amount of time we're going to wear our walking shoes and we're going to do a lot of walk-in.
Speaker 1Absolutely so. I saw in one of our groups the whole who's a witch question Did you see that I answered that question?
Speaker 2Yes, I did.
Speaker 1I was just laughing and then immediately after, like a moderator had to be like hey, do not be judgy, Do not be a bitch, Because this is not what it it doesn't mean what it used to mean.
Speaker 2Yeah, don't start throwing your thoughts and prayers. But also, my friend Robin tagged me in that oh, did she? Which I thought was hilarious. So I'm like okay, let me find out what she needs this for. You're like?
Speaker 1let me throw you some Appalachian.
Speaker 2Granny magic. I guess I'm the neighborhood witch. So literally my Wi-Fi at my place says House of Witchcraft. So when other people it's like the deterrent.
Speaker 1Don't be trying to use my Wi-Fi Right.
Speaker 2And then so does my ring doorbell. It's named House of Witchcraft, so whenever somebody passes in front of my house it says someone's at your house of witchcraft it's hilarious On Life 360,.
Speaker 1when someone gets home, it literally says like someone is in your garage at the Green Mile, dead man walking. Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2See, we love doing like the funny stuff. I don't want to be like your son's home okay, well, well there's the word green in our street name, so that's why I did that oh I know because every time, like the first time I went over there, it kept repeating the street name and I'm like, oh my gosh stop it. It does. It's horrible. Turn here on blah, blah, blah. Turn here on blah blah and I'm like stop and it does that because the entire.
Speaker 1It's like it makes like a whole loop, but it's like you have to make turns because it's not a circle, yeah, and so it's like, despite the fact that it is not round, every Every street in there is the exact same name, because it just goes around All the way around, right, it's so stupid.
Speaker 2So the GPS just keeps saying street name over and over, and I'm like why? Why does your neighborhood have to be like this? Yeah, it's crazy. But, yeah, I found out what she needed it for and I gave her a good basic banishing spell Helpful yeah, hopefully found out what she needed it for and it gave her a good basic banishing spell. Helpful yeah, hopefully, the neighborhood witch. I like it that's so funny.
Speaker 1Call on holly, you're right. All right, I will. I guess today we're gonna talk about isabel blair and her friend marion cootie about isabel blair and her friend marion cootie. Isabel was like 34 and marion was 31 in 1989, which is when they go missing. Oh yeah, so interesting. The two were last seen in the of Alexandria on US 71 South on July 2nd 1989. Sadly, there is like not a single damn article about their actual disappearance. Oh wow, crazy Mm-hmm. Can't find nothing in the old ancient newspaper archives, nothing. The microfiche.
Speaker 2Right.
Neighborhood Witch & Salem Trip Planning
Speaker 1But we can still talk about it. Yes, so Isabel Blair was married to Robert Brunson Blair and he was the son of the late state senator Cecil Blair. At the time of her disappearance, robert was 41 years old. At the time of her disappearance, robert was 41 years old. They had married in May of 1985, and on June 22nd of 1989, blair filed for legal separation from Isabel. The next month she's missing Like not even a whole month, like it's June 22nd, and then she's missing on July 2nd, oh wow.
Speaker 2Yeah, that was a short time.
Speaker 1Yeah, the marriage was a tumultuous one. It is said that Marion was actually trying to help her friend leave Blair. Sheriff Hilton of the Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office, rapides, rapides, parish Sheriff's Office, rapides, said that during the initial investigation of the missing women, blair was very evasive. He tried to avoid answering questions about the last time he saw the women and where he saw them. It was even difficult to really make Blair a strong suspect at the time of the investigation. However, he obviously remained on law enforcement's radar. They're gonna Right, absolutely. You were married to one of the victims. Who do they look at first? Or should they look at first? Always and forever? Always the spouse, always, whether you be a man or a woman, you're always the first suspect.
Speaker 2Suspect number one Yep, because you have thepect number one Yep.
Speaker 1Because you have the motive Yep, Yep, and it's sadly, I feel like a little more often than not. Yeah, it usually is the spouse. It is In some capacity. Sometimes you know, everything looks like they're completely innocent all this time and then come to find out they like hired somebody to do it.
Speaker 2Right, there's been so many of those or blackmailed someone into doing it All of a sudden, go out of town right when that person's murdered.
Speaker 1Yeah, perfect little alibi or some alibi or something. Yeah, yeah. And then they come home and they're like oh, I found my wife dead. Or I found my husband dead, sure, you did. Yeah, you knew he was there. Who did you hire? So apparently they could not even obtain any permission from Blair to search his property and they could not get a warrant to do so because there wasn't any evidence he was involved. Yeah, I'm of course, like assuming that part, because the break in the case came when a tip was given 30 years later to the original investigator, major Mark Badden. This tip was that some Blair family property had been sold. This property just so happens to sit on US 71 South in Alexandria.
Speaker 2And 30 years later, wow.
Speaker 1So this prompted reopening the case. This property was nearby the victim's last known location, so obviously, yeah, we want to see. Yeah, let's, let's investigate. So on October 10th 2019, a pond on the property was searched and a vehicle was discovered. Property was searched and a vehicle was discovered Dun dun dun. The vehicle was consistent with the one that Isabel and Marion were using during the time of their disappearance. It literally took them two days to hoist this truck.
Speaker 1Oh, I bet it was probably settled in the mud Like it had been there for a really long time 30 years it had like worked its way down in there, that guy settled in Yep. So you know, and I know that there's probably like not really much they could get out of the truck itself because it has been submerged forever.
Speaker 1I mean we did the whole evidence and water thing and whatever, but 30 years is a little drastic yeah, yeah so I'm sure the only thing that that proves is obviously now he him or someone in his family had some sort of involvement, because this used to be his family's property and this truck is in the pot, right so now it's like well, where do we go from here?
Speaker 1yeah, we are circling back. So on october 16th 2019, sheriff hilton announced the arrest of the then 71 yearyear-old Robert Brunson Blair on two counts of first-degree murder. They obviously served a search warrant at that point for his property as well, and the search warrant was served at an undisclosed location near the residence of Robert Blair. Disclosed location near the residence of Robert Blair. Sheriff's investigators also had representatives from Louisiana's State Repository for Missing and Unidentified Persons, also known as FACES, and a Rapides Parish District Attorney, as well as the coroner's office helping them. It was then reported that items of evidence consistent with human remains were found. Now they don't say whether or not those human remains belong to the ladies, but I would have to guess that they do.
The Investigation Begins
Speaker 2I mean, you found the truck. Now you found some bones somewhere else yeah, but that just goes to prove that no case is a complete cold case right?
Speaker 1I mean, this is 30 years later and they had nothing to go on until suddenly the property they really wanted to look at got sold, and and then they knew that was their moment that they could try to get permission to search, because the people who own it now don't have anything to worry about. Yeah, not their crime, exactly. So I mean, obviously they'd be more willing to let it happen. So I have pictures of the truck in the pond. Oh, okay, I have pictures of where they dug and found human remains. Obviously they were processing those, but I don't see anywhere where they later reported that they were or weren't, because I don't think they felt like it was necessary at that point. Right, because they've already arrested Robert, they've already done all this other stuff Right they've already done.
Speaker 1So there really wasn't any follow up on that. So there really wasn't any follow up on that. In February of 2020, blair appeared before the ninth judicial district court, judge Hazel for his arraignment. During this proceeding, he announced that he was pleading guilty to both counts. Now they did do a plea agreement, so I think they allowed him to be charged with like to plead guilty to manslaughter.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Which was everything was approved by the families, obviously, of the victims, because the DA wasn't going to offer something that wasn't approved by the victim's family. I guess the reason they did this is because they didn't really care to have the death penalty on. I mean, he's already 71. Exactly, he's already 71. His maximum sentencing for manslaughter would be 40 years.
Speaker 2So that's already a sentence. Yeah, Per count mind you. So that's essentially an 80-year sentence you know if you're yeah, and even if he got the death penalty, he'd probably sit there for as long.
Speaker 1Yeah, he'd probably die before he actually got executed.
Speaker 1So there was really no point in all of that. So the family did agree to do that. So during his arraignment he pled guilty, as he said he would, and he received the maximum sentence of 40 years for each count, him being 71 and serving these sentences concurrently, it essentially is a life sentence. Obviously, victim impact statements were allowed at this proceeding. Iris Seacamp was Isabel Blair's daughter and she was quoted by Town Talk. My mom knew she was going to die by your hands, she just didn't know. When she was the first to give a statement she was crying but was sure to look directly at Blair when she spoke. She also mentioned Isabel's mom, who passed away before knowing what had happened to her daughter. She had brought up all the times that Blair had been in their presence, smiling in their faces, when he had known all along what he had done. She told Blair I can never, never, forgive you for that.
Speaker 2Right 30 years. He thought he got off the hook for killing two women.
Speaker 1I'm sure he still was looking over his shoulder all that fun jazz. But to be able to consciously be in the present of the daughter, of the mother of the woman you murdered, yeah, and act like nothing ever happened, like how maniacal is that? Indeed, just crazy. But each and every person who spoke stated that over the last three decades they all knew he was responsible for the crime yeah, like, and it it happens a lot of time.
Speaker 2people like are, they have this feeling and they know that this person did it, just the evidence wasn't there or right the actual bodies or anything like that exactly and they know, they know, they know.
Speaker 1And it's frustrating to know and not be able to do anything about it, but he got his day and his time For sure.
Speaker 1So Major Badden, the original investigator, also attended the arraignment. Blair's own son and daughter-in-law were also present, and they even were trying to comfort Iris Seacamp, which I thought was sweet. Gwendolyn Coote, marion's sister, also spoke. She told Blair that he not only killed that day, he also robbed. She posed the question what else have you done to the women in your life? Stating that he would rather murder his wife than let her go free. Like truth Right. Like I can't stand that whole, I don't want you, but nobody else can have you either. Like, get over it.
Speaker 2Yeah, you can't like hold and control a person just because you don't want to let go of them, right?
Speaker 1it's just so sad like you obviously were not in a good relationship or a good place in your own life, let alone anything else.
The 30-Year Break in the Case
Speaker 2I mean like let the woman go right. I mean, it takes two people to be in a relationship. You, you can't have it one sided and be like no, I refuse to let you out of this relationship. Yeah.
Speaker 1So, now. So now I'm going to pretend that I want out of it Right and apply for a legal separation, but I'm not going to let you go, I'm going to kill your ass. Basically, I'm like wow.
Speaker 2The mental health in this country. Yeah, it's crazy.
Speaker 1You know, normalize men crying because maybe if they weren't holding all this shit in, they wouldn't act like idiots. Indeed, I don't know, maybe not. Let them cry, maybe it won't change a thing. Let them have feelings, but they should be allowed to have feelings.
Speaker 2I tell my son that all the time, some that are not anger Right or violent. I tell my son that all the time, some that are not anger Right or violent. I tell my son that all the time you are allowed to have feelings and you should not be made to feel bad for those feelings, right. So you know, if you want to express them, express them, feel a way, feel a way.
Speaker 1If it's not hurting anybody else, you go on and feel a way Like I'm not telling you to go out there because you feel like murdering, like no, that's not what we're saying but you know, mine's a scorpio and he, he is a recluse and hides in his room.
Speaker 2So yeah, I'm like, let him out, let the feelings out let yourself out, let yourself out, go outside right with your glowy white skin. Right he's actually darker than me Everybody's glowing in the dark. It's Native American heritage. It's helping him out.
Speaker 1After the sentencing, DA Bowman stated that this was only the second time during his entire career that he has seen a defendant agree with the sentencing. Bowman had also stated that Blair confessed to the murders but tried to claim that it was self-defense. So initially they were like prepared to go to trial because they thought he was going to try to pull that self-defense situation Right, and then they were like now we have to go to trial, we have to deal with this, but it turned out the way it should. Yeah, you're 71 years old.
Speaker 2Just go ahead and just like. Don't waste everybody's time, Right?
Speaker 1I was like whatever you got to say to make yourself feel better about it, I guess. So Robert will serve the remaining years of his life in angola prison. Today he'd be 76 77 I do not see anywhere that he has passed away, but also it's really weird. So like getting into the inmate roster at like smaller jails in louisiana easy yeah, you can see everybody Getting into the one for Angola.
Speaker 2It's on lockdown.
Speaker 1It's on lockdown. I put his name in there 126 million different ways. Still couldn't find it Nothing. So maybe I'm broken. I don't know, which is weird, because usually I can find everything, yeah you're like private investigator number one. So it was just a little odd that I could not find that. But you know, not so fun fact, I guess Mr Blair was like a retired farmer, so he literally had told the DA, you know, that he was looking forward to his sentence in Angola because he could plant vegetables for the rest of his life.
Speaker 2Yeah, because it's a working prison and they farm and grow stuff.
Speaker 1Yeah. So I'm like is this really punishment for him, right? Because he's 71 years old, he's going to basically have someone taking care of him and he's just bored.
Speaker 2No bills and I can garden all day, but just watch my backside yeah, right, so I'm just like okay then.
Speaker 1Yeah, and that I guess would be the frustrating thing for me, if I were like the daughter or the family of right, because you want to see him hurting.
Speaker 2You want to see him like you need to suffer, because yeah whatever, but it's like not really sounding like he's very upset about it. I'm gonna go garden yeah.
Speaker 1So I don't know. I don't know much about the inside the prison life over there. So who?
Speaker 2knows it's not nice. They say it's. It's one of the rougher prisons, yeah, at Angola.
Speaker 1So but I had watched Like a documentary Mm hmm From a long time ago yeah, for out there and it was. It was pretty interesting. Mm hmm had a lot of the stuff about the rodeo and all the other stuff they do out there, but it's like very interesting the way that place is run for sure.
Speaker 2I think I watched that same documentary. I also watched the one about the one in um. Was it arizona or new mexico, where they wear pink and they sleep in tents?
Speaker 1oh yeah, that's arizona yeah, arizona it's like a big desert work, yeah I'm like that.
Speaker 2One's got to be rough, it's like yuma or something yeah out there, yeah, he makes it. I'm like it doesn't matter, if you wear pink, it's okay. Yeah, I mean, who cares, right? So you're not punishing them by making the word pink.
Speaker 1But I don't think it was the.
Speaker 2I don't know that. It's the intention Right.
Speaker 1But I really feel like that's probably Probably a little easier to see. Yeah, and not in the desert and not as harsh as orange.
Speaker 2Pink is the new orange.
Speaker 1Pink is the new orange. Yeah, at least for those guys, I think it's a decent idea. They might as well be doing something while they're out there, yep.
Speaker 2So, and then they you know they actually earn credits or whatever because they can get stuff for work that they've done.
Speaker 1Yeah, which I guess makes it. I think that would make it better for, like, families not having to support people and like giving them money for a canteen or something. Yeah, because if they're earning it Right, they can pay them in ramen noodles, they can go get their own ramen noodles and honey buns Right.
Speaker 2And hug drinks.
Blair's Guilty Plea and Sentencing
Speaker 1Prison food is definitely weird yeah, but all they do is exercise, so it's fine. So they're like they can eat plastic noodles, no big deal plastic noodles and 10 honey buns a day, because I'm going to do 36 push-ups every hour for 12 hours.
Speaker 2And I'll be out in the sun gardening all day. So you know it's fine, Sweat it out, Sweat out all the sugar.
Speaker 1The sugar and grease. I don't think you can sweat out the almost plastic noodles though.
Speaker 2No, probably not, Probably not.
Speaker 1But it seems to be a popular thing to eat their cup of noodles. Yeah, pop tarts yeah, pop tarts.
Speaker 2I've seen like pop tarts have outrageous amount of sugar, way more sugar than honey buns yeah, and like if you turn a honey bun around, look at like the fat and sugar in it. That's more than you're supposed to have in like a week. Yeah, you better spread that honey bun out Spread it out, chop it up in little pieces, share with your friends, right? Would you like a piece of my honey bun? Not that honey bun.
Speaker 1Not that honey bun. No, keep your clothes on in that shower.
Speaker 2You'll be like honey I want those buns. Oh, I just made it explicit, Sorry, I could take that out.
Speaker 1I was just sitting over here going you've got my anaconda. I don't want none unless you've got honey buns.
Speaker 2There we go. We made another one. That's for all you prison folk who might be listening to us Sing it away New theme song. You know like it's crazy because you'll be on TikTok and there'll be TikTok Lives in jail, like they've got a phone and they're on TikTok Live, yeah.
Speaker 1How do you not get in trouble Like do the people who work there not pay attention? I don't think they really at this point care they don't watch it.
Speaker 2Because there's so much stuff smuggled in there, like they get drugs in there all the time. Yeah, they get phones, they get this, so it you know, they'll do a shakedown, I guess, every once in a while and take things away, and I think it's more about finding the, the shanks and the right, like all the weapons and stuff, more than anything. But yeah, they'll be doing. Tiktok lives in jail. I'm just baffled by it. I'm like what? What's going on here?
Speaker 1yeah, so oh, that reminds me too, since, talking about that, I'm watching, uh, happy face on paramount plus yeah yeah, with dennis quaid and like yeah.
Speaker 1With Dennis Quaid and like to what you're saying about contraband and everything else in there. It's insane to me. So he has like a cell phone and he calls his daughter, yeah, and she's like hateful to him, as she should be. Let's be real here. He just murdered a whole bunch— Right, raped and murdered a bunch of women So— she literally calls the prison and reports that he has this cell phone.
Speaker 1So he gets his cell gets shaken down, he gets put in solitary. They take all his stuff away, whatever. When he gets let out, one of the prison guards hands him back his phone and tells him be more discreet. Right, and I think that's pretty much what they did, like they didn't give him back any of the other stuff, but handed him back a phone and said be more discreet.
Speaker 2I was just like WTF, right, but I'm sure that does happen, like literally, because they're monitored, I think on the regular phones because, they can do like video calls and stuff like that.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2So everything's monitored. But yeah, on a cell phone, I mean, I know it's TV, whatever that Right, so everything's monitored.
Speaker 1But yeah, on a cell phone, I mean I know it's TV Whatever, yeah, whatever, but still you have to imagine stuff like that does actually happen though, like they'll give them what they want. Yeah, I mean, there's, I'm sure, p Diddy has a phone right now.
Speaker 2Yeah, sure.
Speaker 1Probably still has Babywild.
Speaker 2Probably, probably still has baby oil. Probably he's like I need, uh, some commissary from baby oil, please. Thank you, what do you mean? You're out of baby oil I just gave you a bottle diddy party and so two hours ago diddy party and sell boxy, that's so gangster right there. Oh my gosh, I'm stupid, but I'm glad to see some justice in an episode.
Speaker 1That's yeah and that's I was like you know what I've done. I personally have done nothing but missing, missing, yeah, like the. Everything I was doing has been like completely unsolved.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1So there was no finish. I don't have to get updates for this one. Well, like you said, I didn't set a Google alert. My first one, beatrice.
Speaker 2That was the only one we've done. That was like Right.
Speaker 1Like a Completely. Completely solved, solved True crime. So I just felt, like you know, giving some hope because I've done so many that aren't solved, that I'm like, see sometimes something can happen 30 years later that brings it to a close. So yay for justice for these ladies. They deserved it. So sad that they lost their lives for sure, especially because I know I'm one of those friends that will come help you get out.
Speaker 2I will threaten the man be like you want to touch somebody come touch me right I will drive there and touch you. I grew up with nothing but boys.
Speaker 1I literally remember when I was little my brother got so mad because, like we lived in an apartment complex where it was mostly little boys. So I'm like this little girl and I'm like I gotta have friends too. So I'm very tomboyish anyway because I grew up around nothing but boys, by my dad who can barely braid my hair. He loved me to have long hair, didn't know how to help me with it Right Crazy. So I'm like you know, out there in the courtyard and my brother decides that he's going to bribe all these boys to literally beat up his sister.
Speaker 2Oh my God, you're supposed to protect your sister.
Prison Life Discussion and Final Thoughts
Speaker 1Chicken Voldemort y'all to protect chicken voldemort, y'all chicken voldemort so all these kids attack me in the courtyard, my dad is standing on the balcony of the apartment complex watching. Yeah, after the fight ends, I go upstairs and I yell at my dad. I'm like why didn't you stop them? He's like are you okay? I was like oh, I cut my the insides of my hands with my fingernails from punching boys and from defending myself absolutely. And I show him that and he's like is that it? I show him that and he's like is that it? And I'm like yeah, he's like okay.
Speaker 2And he turned around and walked away from me Like he literally let this happen as in, like I'm going to let you figure out if you can defend yourself or not. So Well, that was his life lesson. I know that. I know my girl can take care of herself.
Speaker 1So this is why I'm the friend that's like. I will go. They don't like, they don't step to me because they don't know what's going to happen. I'm a wild card and even Chicken Voldemort's friends sometimes, who know me from when we were young, will say something stupid to me over the phone and then they'll laugh it off and then they'll go. You know, the only reason I said that is because you're nowhere around here like I'm super far away from you.
Speaker 1I am scared of you in person and so again, I'm not a violent person, but I will defend myself and I will defend people I care about like ferociously Right. So I'm not killing nobody, no. But if you hit me, I will hit you back Absolutely Tit for tat. So there's that, make it count.
Speaker 2Right Indeed.
Speaker 1Well, that was a good one, yeah, so I hope everybody enjoyed listening to an episode that had some resolution.
Speaker 2I did. I didn't know anything about it.
Speaker 1I know Now absolutely nothing until I told you right before we started recording.
Speaker 2You were like it's a soft one. I'm like ooh.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's all I told you too, right, it's like it's a soft one today, so our theme music is by patty salzetta make sure you guys are following us on all the social medias, especially tiktok and youtube, because every time we take a little trip we'll do a little trip yep we'll do a little video compilation and post it on TikTok as well as YouTube.
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Speaker 2Yep go listen, listen to it. Hold my Sweet Teeth is a Drunken Bee production. Y'all stay safe out there and remember, just because we're dipping doesn't mean you can't keep sipping. Bye, thank you, hey.