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. 106-Before She Vanished: The Story of Dail Dinwiddie
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A crowded college district. A buzzing post-concert high. A young artist who asks a bouncer about her friends, leaves her purse—along with her asthma inhaler—and steps into the night. We pull the camera back on the 1992 disappearance of Dail Dinwiddie in Columbia’s Five Points, starting not with the mystery but with the person: a thoughtful, observant 23-year-old studying art history, rooted in family, and known for showing up. That foundation matters, because when someone grounded in routine vanishes from a well-lit, busy corridor, every missing detail grows heavier.
We walk through that charged night after U2’s Zoo TV tour, the surge from Williams-Brice Stadium to Jungle Jims, and the subtle hinge where normalcy slips—Dail separated from friends, the calm questions at the door, the purse left behind. From there, we follow the last confirmed sighting on Harden Street and the search that scoured streets, alleys, wooded cut-throughs, and drainage systems. No struggle reported. No reliable witness. No physical evidence. The absence becomes the clue.
Together we examine the most plausible theories: a spiked drink that explains the abandoned essentials; an offered ride from a familiar face or a persuasive stranger; a rapid abduction window in a thinning crowd. We weigh each possibility against her habits, her medical needs, and the compressed timeline. Along the way, we talk about why crowded spaces create blind spots, how bystanders filter out “small” anomalies, and what practical steps actually help friends stay connected and safe on big nights out.
This is a story about memory, vigilance, and the stubborn grace of families who refuse to let a name fade. If you were in Five Points in the early 90s—or if any detail sparks recognition—your piece may matter more than you think. Hit play, share this with someone who remembers Columbia’s bar scene, and help keep Dail's name moving forward. If this resonated, subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: which detail changed how you see the case?
Setting The Stage And Banter
SPEAKER_01Today's episode is not just about what happened to Dale Dinwiddie. It's about who she was before she disappeared. Because every unsolved case begins with a life that was already in motion. This is Hold My Sweet Teeth. And I'm Pearl. That did not sound promising. I don't like Mondays. But you know what? I mean, I like that our episodes come out on Mondays. Right. But you know, even though we're pre-recording this, you'll be in Disney today.
SPEAKER_00I will be in Disney today. So cheer up. Eating a churro.
SPEAKER_01Yes.
SPEAKER_00Way off my diet.
SPEAKER_01It's almost like a king cake, you know.
SPEAKER_00It's cinnamon. It is. It's cinnamon, yeah.
SPEAKER_01Since we didn't get our king cake for, you know, Mardi Gras, but it's fine.
SPEAKER_00It's fine. Hopefully, I have enjoyed many an Asian dish.
SPEAKER_01Yes.
SPEAKER_00Because Lunar Festival.
SPEAKER_01Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00So hopefully I still come back weighing less. Right. Disney calories don't count, right? Exactly.
SPEAKER_01Okay.
SPEAKER_00That's what I'm saying. Like, I should still come back weighing less.
SPEAKER_01Any vacation calories do not.
SPEAKER_00I mean, I can't fully enjoy myself without allowing myself to fully enjoy myself.
SPEAKER_01Don't restrict yourself on vacation.
SPEAKER_00It's just a couple of days, it'll be fine. Right, right. I will be fine.
SPEAKER_01And speaking of vacation, if anyone in Scotland would like to adopt us, we are willing to move there permanently.
SPEAKER_00Absolutely. We are up for Scottish adoption. Right. I keep seeing so many reels that I'm like, it's so pretty.
SPEAKER_01I know. I want to go so bad. Or Ireland, either one. Or down. Where wherever off of this continent.
SPEAKER_00Preferably one of those. Yes.
SPEAKER_01If we have a preference, there we go.
SPEAKER_00Yes. We we want to come hang out with the Highland cows.
SPEAKER_01Oh my gosh. Like, I just want to like roam the the castles with a candle in my white flowy dress and haunt something.
SPEAKER_00And look at waterfalls out the window.
SPEAKER_01Yes.
SPEAKER_00And learn all the all the words and things we don't understand.
SPEAKER_01Indeed, indeed.
SPEAKER_00I keep watching, like, there's some reels that have come across by stuff that were like words that Scottish people say that you don't know what it means, and then they like tell you what it is. Right. Like, look at that. Learning the language. Learning the language. I'm getting admicated before I go. You know, just in case we get that email. Right. Willing to adopt you. Right. Come on.
SPEAKER_01Come on. Let's go. I have I have a castle and 16 rooms.
SPEAKER_00And they'll be like, welcome to Hold My Sweet Tea. The podcast from Scotland.
SPEAKER_01I will be willing to change that. Like, we can do it. We can do it. But uh, we do have to bring our adult children because we can't leave them here by themselves.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, no, they have to come.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00And then I'm about to have a grandbaby as well.
SPEAKER_01Yep.
SPEAKER_00So just be aware of what you're signing up for.
SPEAKER_01You get the whole package.
SPEAKER_00We have dogs and cats.
SPEAKER_01Yes, those two.
SPEAKER_00So those also have to attend this uh movement. Yes, yes.
SPEAKER_01Absolutely.
SPEAKER_00That's it though. I don't have any fish or anything else. Like just dogs, cats.
SPEAKER_01Yep. Two cats, one dog. You have two dogs, one cat. There we go.
SPEAKER_00Willing to give away all my aloe vera plants. I have no time to grow anything else because they're psycho and they keep reproducing so much. Right. It's like they're weeds, which is weird because I've never had aloe vera plants grow like this. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01They are just spawning.
SPEAKER_00What am I supposed to do with all of you?
SPEAKER_01Right.
SPEAKER_00They're like, use us.
SPEAKER_01We're medicinal.
SPEAKER_00If you live in Louisiana and you would like an aloe vera plant, email us. Send us a message.
SPEAKER_01Yes, send us a message. You can have a hold my sweet tea aloe vera plant.
Introducing Dale Dinwiddie’s Life
SPEAKER_00Right. I'll paint HMS T on the outside and get a little ghost on the little plastic planter.
SPEAKER_01But you know, today we're not traveling to Scotland, but we are traveling to Columbia, South Carolina.
SPEAKER_00Back in the SC.
SPEAKER_01Yep, back in the SC. When you did yours, I was like, oh, mine's there too.
unknownYeah.
SPEAKER_01Sometimes that happens.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Because we try to, I mean, we disclose a little bit of info so we don't do the same person or whatever, but we don't always tell each other where it is.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. So my um story today, and I'm going to spell her name. But I did look up how to say it, and her name is Dale Denwitty. It's D-A-I-L Dale.
SPEAKER_00Very um different. Different.
SPEAKER_01Because I was like, Dale. I didn't know how to say it, so I had to look it up. Yeah. And then Denwitty, D-I-N-W-I-D-D-I-E, very unique name. Before she, you know, became the subject of an investigation, before her name appeared on flyers or news broadcast, she was simply a young woman living her life. She was a Bridgerton woman. That's right. Lady Dinwiddy. Dinwitty. There we go. It sounds right. It sounds good. And you know, she was a she was a daughter who came home at night. She was a friend who made plans and kept them. Oh, she's better than me. Right. She was a student who showed up quietly and consistently to the life that she was building. She was a young adult. And I remember those days. And this was in September of 1992. So very, very remembered those days because I was going through pretty much those same things. I was 12. Well, she was 23 in 92. I was not quite 23 yet, but like I said, she was living in Columbia, South Carolina. Um, she was taking graduate level art courses at the University of South Carolina. She had recently finished college and was still in that in-between space, no longer a student in the traditional sense, but not yet settled into whatever would come next. So just in that weird space. I mean, I remember those weird spaces in your early 20s. You're like, what do I do? Where do I go? Odd transition times.
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
Routine, Personality, And Art
SPEAKER_01But, you know, she had routines. She had people who expected to hear from her. And this was back before cell phones were huge, and you know, it was just kind of like a cell phone was because it was 12 years. It was like the big one, like the ones you could get. Like, I still have my phone in a bag that I had in my car, and it had like a receiver on it with a cord, and you could talk on it. Like the this was back in those days. So, you know, you had to use a payphone or a pager to get in contact. Yes, had the beep up and be like, beep me. And you had like little beep codes to whatever you needed. Yeah. And then they got fancy, and you could call in and tell the the operator what you wanted to say, uh like the message you wanted to say on there, and they had to type it out, and it was hilarious.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, and it would be like pop up on the beeper screen.
SPEAKER_01Yep. And they were like, oh my god, I can't believe you just said that to the uh beeper lady. The beeper lady. But okay. Yeah. So people who knew Dale often described her the same way. She was thoughtful, very gentle, observant, quiet girl. She wasn't the loudest person in the room. She didn't demand attention. She was the kind of person who listened more than she spoke. I feel like I'm that way, especially around strangers or in a strange situation. I'm I'm more outspoken now because I don't really care. But like I used to always be that way. I was the quiet, observant one. And you know, I had to read the room before anything came out. And if I didn't like the vibe, I'd leave. I'm like, I'm done. I'm out.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, I was like that when I was young too. Like I was just really quiet.
SPEAKER_01Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00But not no more.
SPEAKER_01Me either. Me either, because no. Art mattered deeply to her. She had studied art history and continued taking art courses, drawn to the way art told stories without words. That was, you know, and sh and like she was quiet, but she was artsy. It was something that fit her personality. Very reflective, patient, and intentional. Dale lived with her family at the time. She wasn't drifting or unstable. She had a steady home life, a close relationship with her parents, and a sense of responsibility that showed in how she moved through the world. Those close to her later would say this again and again. Dale wasn't reckless. She wasn't impulsive. And she wasn't someone who disappeared without explan like explanation at all.
SPEAKER_00Right. So she was like, Yeah, like you said, very intentional and told people if she was doing something different.
SPEAKER_01Right. So at 23, like life feels open, but it also feels grounded. You know which streets are familiar, which friends you trust, which places feel safe. Dale had friends she spent time with regularly, like most people did at that age. Sure. She wasn't isolated. She made plans. She went out. She enjoyed the rhythm of being young in a college town. The ease of familiar bars, familiar faces, familiar nights. Like I remember all that stuff. Like that was your scene. That was what you did. And it was just That is how I live, thanks to anxiety.
SPEAKER_00Yes. I also must know where the bathroom is. Yes, and how the hell to get out of here.
The U2 Concert Night
SPEAKER_01Yep. I need exits and restrooms. We all know where the bar is. Yes. And Columbia wasn't new to her. She knew the five points area. She knew how nights like this usually ended with laughter, tired feet, getting home safely, you know, because everybody back then wore those heels and feet would kill you at the end of the night. But, you know, you looked good. There was nothing about her life that suggested she was on the verge of disappearing. So on September of September 24th of 1992, Columbia felt alive. U2, the band, was in town bringing their zoo TV tour to Williams Bryce Stadium. I remember that. I remember on I never like went to a U2 concert, but like I remember on MTV the Zoo TV tour. It was like this huge thing, and U2 was like touring and going to all these college towns and stuff.
SPEAKER_00I have a U2 complaint.
SPEAKER_01Yes.
SPEAKER_00I just want to voice this on the air. I think it was a really cool idea to give an album away for free. However, I don't think it's a really cool idea that I can't take it off of my Apple music. So it's the first thing that starts playing automatically every time I get in the car. It's annoying. I've started to hate you. It still does? It still does. I took it off. It came back like a virus.
SPEAKER_01I remember when that happened and they just like dropped it on everybody's iPhone. And that's back when I had an iPhone now, and I switched to Samsung. So I don't have that issue.
SPEAKER_00Really cool idea.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00But you should be allowed to take it off if you don't want to listen to it 87 million times every time you get in the car and plug it on.
SPEAKER_01Oh no. Yeah. That would be fun.
SPEAKER_00My phone connects to the radio and it automatically starts playing U2.
SPEAKER_01That would be that would be my one reason to switch to Samsung.
SPEAKER_00But yeah, I switched to Samsung, so I don't have so now what was cool in the beginning has become a reason for me to dislike the world of U2.
SPEAKER_01Well, back in 19, you know, 92, like they were still cool then. For U2 fans, it was a it was a big moment. One of those nights that like just feels special before it even began. And I remember like back in those days, like probably like 94, 95, that's when I would go see like Green Day and Bush and all those concerts. And uh that feeling was just like uh the whole day leading up to the anticipation, yes, yeah. It was so awesome, and you were just like the whole day was just all about that.
SPEAKER_00And then you went to the concert, and it was you're like planning out your outfit and all the other stuff, you know. All of that stuff. Oh my god, I can't wait to get there.
SPEAKER_01All of that. And it was funny because during the Super Bowl, we were watching Green Day and everything, and I was like, Oh, I wish they would have done some of their older stuff. And my son Dylan, he was like, Like, how old is their older stuff? I was like, Well, I went and saw them when their like their dookie album came out, and that was back in um '94 or '95. And he's like, Oh my God.
SPEAKER_00Yes.
Jungle Gyms And The Lost Purse
SPEAKER_01I said, but look at them. They're still touring, they're still doing, and they played the Super Bowl, and it was awesome. It sounded so good. So that night, Dale went with her friends to the concert. She was excited. She this wasn't a risky plan or a last-minute decision. It was a concert that was like an experience that she shared with thousands of people. Everybody. So music filled the stadium, the crowd moved as one. Like for a few hours, everybody was just like immersed in the sounds of YouTube. Right. And so after the concert and everything, like everybody started kind of pouring back into the city. Um, like many people downtown that night, Dale and her friends, they weren't ready for the evening to end, like you usually aren't. You're like, you got that adrenaline, you're like, let's go. So after the concert, they went to a popular local bar in the Five Point district called Jungle Gyms, J-I-M-S. Jungle Gyms.
SPEAKER_00Okay.
SPEAKER_01And I bet Jungle Gyms was popping off, let me tell you.
SPEAKER_00I was about to say, um, I'm sure. It was crowded. Baby jamming.
SPEAKER_01It was loud, it was full of students and music and the like the familiar energy of late night. I remember going to like LSU campus, like the downtown like tiger bars and all that stuff around that time, and like the energy was just insane.
SPEAKER_00Did they do tell everybody, welcome to the jungle, baby? Right.
SPEAKER_01Jungle gyms. But you know, there like friends moved through the space, people talked, drinks were ordered, like it the night unfolded the way countless other nights had done before it. At some point, after about one o'clock in the morning, Dale became separated from her friends. But no one panicked, no one raised an alarm. Like it's a busy bar. People drift apart. You see somebody else that you know, and you're like, hey, and you're over here talking or doing something like that. Like you you eventually like get back together with that with your group that you were, you know, with. But Dale, like she couldn't find like her friends and stuff, but she spoke to the bouncer at Jungle Gym Jungle Gyms, not Jungle, Jungle, asking if he had seen her friends, because they go in there all the time, so he knew who she hung out with. And she stood there for several minutes. She was just calm, patient, expecting this moment to like resolve itself. And eventually she the bouncer said she had walked away. But oddly enough, she left her purse behind. And I guess she was like left it sitting there because she was gonna come back and grab her stuff.
SPEAKER_00But I don't know if I'd leave a purse sitting in the phone.
SPEAKER_01I wouldn't either.
SPEAKER_00So that makes me wonder if like somebody didn't put something in their drink.
Last Sighting On Harden Street
SPEAKER_01Maybe. But that detail would become one of the most unsettling parts of the case. So Dale she wasn't known to leave her belongings behind. So her purse held like all girls' essentials like that you would need for the evening. Like, why would you abandon it, you know?
SPEAKER_00Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Still in that moment, no one realized that it would like what it would come to mean. So Dale was seen like walking outside into the night. The last confirmed sighting placed her walking north on Harden Street. So she was asking the bouncer, like, have you seen my friends? She left her purse sitting there, goes outside, goes outside and starts walking down the street. Very odd behavior. Like it that's something that wouldn't have normally happened with anybody, I don't think.
SPEAKER_00Mm-mm.
SPEAKER_01Something's off. Yeah, something's very off. So, you know, crowds that had filled the area earlier were thinning, the noise was fading, and everything was getting quieter, it was getting closing time, of course. There was no indication, like even people that had seen her in here that said that she was like afraid. There was no evidence anywhere of a struggle, no sign that she believed that something was wrong. She was like simply walking and then she was gone, which is just like really, really odd.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, why was she walking anyway without her stuff? Yeah. Like you just straight up left without your things.
Search Efforts And No Evidence
SPEAKER_01So when Dale didn't return home, like, of course, concern grew quickly. This wasn't like her. She didn't stay out all night without calling, she didn't disappear without telling someone where she was going. So, you know, this confusion all of a sudden just turned into fear for her family. And that fear turned into the realization that something was truly wrong. And like you said, maybe she was maybe she was drugged. Maybe something happened and she was just like she's rubbed or GHB'd or something.
SPEAKER_00She had to have been like disoriented.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, disoriented and just wandering off, like not regular drunk. No, but maybe in her brain she was thinking like this is the way home, and she was just like heading that way. So a missing person's report was filed. Searches began, friends, family, investigators like retraced her steps, hoping that something or anything had been overlooked. But Dale didn't come home. Police search nearby streets, wooded areas. Drainage systems, anywhere she might have gone. Tips came in, leads were followed, time passed, days turned into weeks, those weeks turned into months. The case remained open, but answers none. She just like flat out disappeared. There was no evidence left behind besides her purse. No leads, no nothing. Nothing. So as the days passed, investigators began to understand that this was not a simple case of someone losing track of time. Dale had vanished in an area that should have offered answers because the five points area was busy. It was crowded. It was full of people moving through the same streets at the same hours. It's not like one random person walking at like 1:30 in the morning. There was a lot of college kids out there.
SPEAKER_00Oh, yeah, no doubt.
SPEAKER_01A lot of people.
SPEAKER_00Those streets are always people on them when they're near the colleges.
Theories, Leads, And Dead Ends
SPEAKER_01And yet no one came forward with a clear amount of what happened after she was last seen walking away from jungle gyms. Police focused first on the like immediate surroundings. They found like no physical evidence whatsoever. But what stood out most, like I said, was that what she left behind, her purse. And inside were like personal items she would have normally kept close. And notably, the biggest thing that was in her purse was her asthma medication. She had severe like asthma, and she knew that she couldn't go like long periods without her inhaler. So she, you know, this was like all her life. So she wouldn't have just like left that behind. That's something like your cell phone is now like permanently attached to your hand. You don't go anywhere without your phone. So at least not anywhere outside your house. Right. On purpose. So if you have asthma and you've had this like all your life, you don't go anywhere without your asthma inhaler. You have a backup inhaler, you have an emergency inhaler, you have them all over the place. So to those that knew her, this made the idea of a voluntary disappearance even harder to believe. Investigators began to say openly that her family, what her family had already known, this was not something Dale would have chosen. So police interviewed employees and patrons from Jungle Gyms. They tried to piece together who had been there, who might have noticed something out of place. Did she order a drink? Would somebody give her a drink? Anything like that? But nights like that, especially in a noisy, crowded bar and everybody's drinking, like they start to, they start to blur together. Like the music's loud, conversations are overlapping, faces become indistinct. Like you start, you're like, you're aware of things around you, but you're not aware of like details and stuff. No one reported seeing Dale leave with another person. No one recalled a struggle. No one could say that they followed her path down Harden Street after she walked away. The absence of witnesses became one of the most haunting elements of the case. Like it's just crazy that nobody's seen anything.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, I mean, past the bouncer. Yeah. And then she's seen on the street walking, and then that's it.
SPEAKER_01And that's it. Nobody with nobody, poof, nothing.
SPEAKER_00No surveillance. But that's my thing, is like, did they check cameras?
SPEAKER_01I don't know. And it, but it was in 92, so did they have cameras?
SPEAKER_00And they had those ugly ones. Yeah, like the old like they were happy just very noticeable. Yeah. Not that you'd get a good picture, but Yeah.
SPEAKER_01But I it's just weird. And then like she just didn't vanish from an empty road or a remote area. She, like I said, there there were a lot of people around. So there's theories, there's questions. Um as the investigation continued, detectives were left with possibilities, but not answers. Could somebody had offered her a ride? Yes, I'm sure they could have. And like that would be the biggest thing. Could she have trusted the wrong person? Of course. But could it have been somebody that she knew and that's why she accepted the ride? Did something happen in the short window of time after she was last seen? Well, obviously, because she disappeared.
SPEAKER_00She's gone, so like, did she pass out somewhere and someone take advantage of the moment, snatch her up? I mean, who knows?
Time Passes And Family’s Vigil
SPEAKER_01Right. So police explored the possibility of an abduction. They also examined whether someone known to her could have been involved, of course. Like, and then, like I said, tips had come in from the public, like hundreds of them, then thousands. Each one followed, each one ultimately leaving leading nowhere. So at times, persons of interest were questioned. Some were later connected to other crimes, but no evidence ever definitively linked anyone to Dale's disappearance. No physical evidence was recovered, no confirmed sighting, no remains have ever been found. The case just stalled, not because it was forgotten, but because like it literally refused to yield anything solid. So, you know, this this for years just kind of went cold and went on. Investigators changed, leads grew cold. But this case has always remained open. And from time to time, like an age progression image of Dale would be released. Just be like, you know, this is what she would look like now, possibly.
SPEAKER_00Um right, like a have you seen me because how many times have we seen like someone come forward and be like, no, I disappeared on purpose?
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Or I know that girl. Maybe, you know, I mean, trafficking was still a thing back then. It just wasn't called trafficking.
SPEAKER_00Toxic family situations were still a thing back then, and people tried to get out of them and became who they needed to become to accomplish that. You never really know. I mean, it doesn't seem to be the case now, but just saying it's important to keep that picture out there. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01And for like the public and people who report on this case and everything, like it's it's a mystery. But for her family, it's you know, it's waiting, it's unanswered phone calls, it's learning how to live with uncertainty. Like, you don't know, she disappeared, like you can never settle on one thing in your brain like what happened.
SPEAKER_00Right. Yeah. Too many questions.
SPEAKER_01So how does a young woman disappear from a crowded college district without leaving a trace? That's like the crazy part. And the why was her purse left behind? This it's crazy questions. Yeah. Crazy, crazy questions. And I was like, this one's interesting, and they still report on it from time to time. Um they still, you know, will run it on certain sites, on news, things like that, and bring up the story. But she she's one of those cases where they have nothing.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. It's like, what the heck?
SPEAKER_01But she, you know, she was a a young woman who was just entering her life and who had friends and she loved art and all of the fun things that a young woman should be doing at that time.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. And here we are. Yeah. Like, this was 1992. Yeah. It is 2026.
Why Witnesses Matter And What To Report
SPEAKER_01So she would be in her 50s at this point. So, but I think with stories like these, as long as it's still being told, it's still getting her name out there. And maybe one day somebody will wake up and go, I should really tell what I know.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. And shame on you for not, but also, why the heck would it take that long? Yeah.
SPEAKER_01For sure.
SPEAKER_00Uh I don't think I could live with myself knowing something and then seeing stuff like that.
SPEAKER_01Oh no. And going, but it's happened time and time again. Like people, like years later, they'll be like, Well, I do have a little bit of information on this thing, or I did see this, but I didn't think it was something important. I should report everything. If you see something, report it. Yeah, you never know what you know. Yesterday we were at work, and even though you were like, Oh, there's little kids out front riding a bike, and then I heard screaming out back, I was like, Let me check real quick. Yeah. And I opened our back door to work, and I was like, okay, it's the little girls ride the bike. Because you never know. You never know. Somebody could have abducted a child and somebody could have been out there beating their mama.
SPEAKER_00Exactly.
SPEAKER_01Who knows? So be a nosy bitch. You know? Yep. Report things. Indeed. Absolutely. But you know who isn't a nosy bitch?
SPEAKER_00That one's all on Holly Patty.
SPEAKER_01She's like, maybe I am, maybe I'm not. I mean, how do you know? She has a good nose for music, though. Oh my gosh, she has the best nose for music. And the best for the music.
SPEAKER_00If there's a nose for music, she could sniff out a good tune.
SPEAKER_01That's right.
SPEAKER_00She's like, I smell a good tune.
SPEAKER_01That's the one right there. Thanks, Patty, for making our music.
SPEAKER_00Yes. Thank you. Thank you.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_00And then you guys don't forget about sweet tea after dark. If you have a story to share with us, please send it.
SPEAKER_01And we really hope y'all enjoyed the anonymous story that was posted on Thursday because it was awesome.
SPEAKER_00Yes, it was. It was great. Yes. It's exactly what we asked for. Right. So we're waiting. We're waiting. Send them in to hold my sweet tea podcast at gmail.com.
SPEAKER_01We literally do a little dance when somebody emails us.
SPEAKER_00I literally just did one. I know. You just did one. It's the happy dance.
unknownYep.
SPEAKER_01So email us, reach out to us on socials, do all of those cool things. Yepers. Yep. We're everywhere. Everywhere. Everywhere you want to be. Except for Scotland. Adopt us, please. Yeah, don't forget. And as always, Hole My Sweet Tea is a drunken bee production. And you guys remember to stay safe out there. Report stuff if you see it. And just because we're dipping doesn't mean you can't keep sipping.
SPEAKER_00Bye.