2023-04-18
43 分钟Adam fields a call from truck dispatcher Frank Ludd (the incomparable Patton Oswalt) who shares stories of a lady-faced chainsaw wielder, a trucking death near an ancient burial ground in Maine, and the true price of hotdogs in this The Texas Chainsaw Massacre themed episode. Then Adam talks to Patton about horror, his love of film, and behind the scenes stories of filming The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. ________________ SHOW INFORMATION Twitter: @MyDeadNeighbors Instagram: @MyNeighborsAreDead Email: MyNeighborsAreDead@gmail.com Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/myneighborsaredead Merchandise: TeePublic Subscribe: Apple PodcastsSubscribe: Spotify
Welcome back to another episode of my neighbors are dead.
I'm your host, Adam Peacock, and we're all familiar with the big names in horror, Freddy, Jason, the vegetable man, cryptid.
But who we're not familiar with are the ones just outside the terror, the ones who didn't get to tell their tales.
This week's episode, I talk a lot about my grandma.
She was a dispatcher for a trucking company for many years, and she actually lost that job for her reason being, quote, she couldn't yell at the drivers, but a man could.
So she lost her job dispatching, but I think it was still pretty cool.
She was a dispatcher for a trucking company.
When you're a little kid, seeing big trucks is cool as hell.
But I don't think my grandmother had any murders attached to her job.
And if she did, she never told me about it.
She covered it up, and she handled it very, very well.
This week's guest kind of did the same thing.
I got to hear about the other side, the dark, seedy side of trucker dispatching.
Enjoy the show.
Welcome back to another episode of my neighbors are dead.
I'm your host, Adam Peacock.
And this week, I'm very excited because I didn't have to leave.
I'm taking a phone call.
I'm taking a phone call from just outside of Austin, Texas.
I got dispatcher for the black Maria trucking company, Frank Ludd, calling in.