Join us for part 2 of the Texas Killing Fields!
Hi Friends! Our transcripts aren't perfect, but I wanted to make sure you had something - if you'd like an edited transcript, I'd be happy to prioritize one for you - please email doomedtofailpod@gmail.com - Thanks! - Taylor
Taylor: We are back live talking, chatting, having a great time
>> Taylor: In the matter of the people of State of California vs. Orenthal James Simpson, case number BA096.
>> Farz: And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do. We are back live talking, chatting, having a great time. How you doing, Taylor?
>> Taylor: Good, good. I also made these BTS earrings that spin. You see,
>> Farz: I think. I think you have an obsession. I actually am starting to worry about you.
>> Taylor: Oh, my God, it's so cool. Yeah, I'm good. I'm ready for your story. Are you doing your second half of your.
>> Farz: So, yes, I'm going to be covering part two of our Texas Killing Field series. Technically, I'm going to wrap it after this, but I did find a really, really fun family murder that happened that are associated with Texas Killing Field that are also tied to like a Jesus freak cult. And I kind of might do a mini side quest. I didn't like, factor that in because it was like a family situation, not like part of the standard Texas. But that one was pretty fun, too. But I kind of alluded to what we're going to talk about here last time, which had to do with we're going to cover a NASA scientist who was accused and suspected of being a part of this. So we're going to cover a lot of folks here. It's going to be fun.
>> Taylor: Space makes you crazy.
>> Farz: Space does that.
Welcome to Fail. We bring you historical disasters and failures and interesting stories
So last week we went through the 1970s killing fields. Oh, yeah, right. We have to introduce ourselves.
>> Taylor: Hello. Sorry about that. Welcome to Fail. We bring you historical disasters and failures and interesting stories. And today Faris is going to talk about the Texas Killing Fields. If you haven't listened to the first episode, go back, listen to that one or listen to this one. Then go back and listen to this one again.
>> Farz: Yeah, sorry. I got really excited and just decided to skip straight past our intro, which is also, by the way, guys, the reason why Taylor fired me from doing intros, because I was doing it all the time and totally forgetting.
Last week we discussed Michael Self and Edward Bell in the 1970s killings
So here we are, going back. So here we go. Last week we went through the 1970s killings and discussed Michael Self and Edward Bell. Edward Bell, who was arrested for another murder, but who we think committed several Detectives Killing Field murders. And then Michael Self, who was convicted of two murders, but who we think is probably innocent because the police who arrested him were also bank robbers convicted of 50 and 30 years in prison and also for torturing confessions out of people like this guy. So that's the world we're in.
>> Taylor: Yeah, I go back and look at all those cases. It's not good.
>> Farz: Not good at all in the 1980s, there were an additional 13 murders. Again, telling the story from the perspective of the victims really doesn't paint any sort of narrative because it's just the exact same thing over. You can only use those words of descriptors so many times. It's not that interesting.
Clyde Edwin Hedrick was convicted of murdering Ellen Beeson in 1984
So we're going to start today with a guy named Clyde Edwin Hedrick, which three names, serial killer. Everybody knows this. We'll start with the victim. He was convicted of killing Ellen Beeson. So Ellen was also. Real quick. A lot of this story is from, like, the 80s in Texas, in the middle of nowhere, when Texas was like, sparsely populated back then. And some of the details are, like, a little bit wonky because, like, part of it I'm pulling from a Texas monthly article. Part of it I'm pulling from a Wikipedia page. Part of it I'm pulling from a Netflix series. Like, it's not as totally a clear narrative. So some of this stuff I'm going to be like. And we think it's this because it's not 100% guaranteed. So that's just real quick. Okay. Ellen was 29 when she went missing on July 29th of 1984. That day, she was at Texas Moon Club, which I had to. This is one of the things I spent way too much time researching. So, like, what. What is the Moon Club? Like, what. In my mind, I was like, this has to be like strip club or a brothel. You know, like, it has like an old west Texas vibe to it or sound to it. It's not. It's like a social club where people just go there, drink and play darts. That's basically it. So it. Dive bar. That's what it was. Yeah. And there she met a guy named Clyde Edwin Hedrick, who was a local. Local construction worker. And it's also worth noting that another victim was a waitress at Texas Moon Club who would go missing a year or so later. According to her friends, she, Ellen and Clyde made plans to go swimming later on that day, and Clyde was the last person she was ever seen with. Her remains were discovered about a year later. Again, the details are a little bit difficult to track. I could not figure out how we know this, but apparently Clyde took one of Ellen's friends to the part that. To where he had buried or dumped her body and had shown her the body and said, you know, be compliant in some way, otherwise they'll do this to you as well. I. That's all I can kind of assume of what happened. The friend, obviously. I mean, it took her some months, but she obviously went and later reported this to police. So Clyde was arrested. He was originally arrested on abuse of a corpse and sentenced to one year in prison for that.
>> Taylor: Wait, because he dug that girl up.
>> Farz: Because he was, like, fishing with the corpse and just, like, jabbing with a stick and saying, like, hey, look at this. Look at this. Like, you shouldn't do that.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: Let the corpse remain where it's at. He would claim that she had died due to accidental drowning while they were swimming. So it was just an. Just an accident. He just dumped her body where he could. Where you could dumper in 2011.
>> Taylor: I'm sorry, that feels worse. That feels like the crime again.
>> Farz: This is like Texas in the 1980s. You're a construction worker hanging out the moon club. Like, this doesn't feel that odd to me. Maybe. Maybe I'm like, so Texas at this point that, like, this doesn't warm my brain the way it probably should.
>> Taylor: Just feel like, you should report if your friend dies, they're just like.
>> Farz: They weren't friends. They met that day, and then she died that day.
>> Taylor: Doesn't matter. Yeah, okay, keep going.
>> Farz: So in 2011, they would exhume Ellen's body, and they determined that she actually had several skull fractures, which I read that. And again, this is one of those things where I can't really piece it together because I'm like, I'm pretty sure in the 1980s, they also had eyeballs, and they could determine that the skull was fractured.
>> Taylor: Maybe her hair was too big. Oh, no. But she was wet,
>> Farz: and she was decomposing in a swamp for, like, a year. She didn't have any hair anyways. Again, I don't totally know, but then again, it's hard to. I'm not trying to cast aspersions, but when your cops are bank robbers and beating confessions out of people, maybe the investigators aren't the best.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: So after they discovered that she had these fractures to her skull, they would charge her with. Charge him with her murder. And he was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in 2014 and sentenced to 20 years. This is crazy, though. Hear me out. In 1977, in the interest of trying to alleviate prison crowding, Texas had passed a law that called for mandatory parole for any prisoner if they're accrued good time. Plus actual time served in prison equaled the total prison sentence. So if you're, like, exceptionally good, then you get. It's logarithmic. Like, it increases based on amount of time that you're there. Like, one day isn't one day. Basically, one day could be five days, one day could be 10 days. Right. Like, that's what I'm getting at.
>> Taylor: Depending on how you do.
>> Farz: Yeah. Like if you're, if, if you, you're good enough to where you haven't gotten to prison infraction, well, you get one day of good time, but if you then become like a teacher in prison, then you get 10 days per day. Like, that's what I'm getting at.
>> Taylor: Okay.
>> Farz: So even though Clyde was charged for this murder slash involuntary manslaughter charge in 2014, they had to apply the old law to him.
Tim Miller filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Clyde and secured a 24 million judgment
That's always been the case. And, and law, like, you always have to apply the law that's relevant to that person. You can't do it retroactive. So because of that, again, he got sentenced in 2014. He was released in October of 2021.
>> Taylor: Wow.
>> Farz: Yeah. There was one man, one father of a victim, who was not pleased with this. Tim Miller, Laura's father. Laura's father from the part. From part one, who is also the founder of the nonprofit Equisearch. Quick reminder, Laura Miller was a 16 year old who went missing a few months after Ellen had gone missing. Her body was found in 1986. And according to informants, this guy Clyde had confessed in jail to Laura's murder as well as up to five other girls. So Clyde was never charged for Laura's murder or anyone else's except Ellen's. But in 2022, Tim Miller filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Clyde and secured a 24 million judgment in his, in his favor. It's meaningless. It actually has literally no value. It's like the guys, a serial killer, rapist rotting in jail, who was a construction worker when he wasn't drunk at the Texas.
>> Taylor: He doesn't. He doesn't have $20 million.
>> Farz: Yeah, you're never gonna get any, any money out of this guy. In March of 2026, Clyde, who was 72 at the time, was admitted to a Houston area hospital with respiratory issues and was plugged into a respirator with breathing tubes. He was visited by detectives on March 21st of 2026. What was just happened to discuss the other murders he was presumed to have committed, which I want to go into details of how they reached that presumption here in a second. Shortly after that visit, Clyde voluntarily removed his breathing tube and died.
>> Taylor: Yeah, of course he did.
>> Farz: Yeah. So technically, his cause of death was suicide. This is 2026 has just happened from murders stemming from 20 plus or 40 plus years ago.
>> Taylor: Wait, do they count that as suicide?
>> Farz: That count as suicide? Yeah.
>> Taylor: Even though the doctors, like, let you do it?
>> Farz: I don't think the doctors let him do it. I think he just did it.
>> Taylor: Oh, Jesus.
>> Farz: Yeah, yeah. Because. Because there's a reason why he probably thought his duck was cooked. Yeah, Goose was cooked. Goose or duck? The chicken. The chicken was cooked like it's a goose. His cook was chicken. Again, this is not where his story ends because it's all tied back to what just happened in Texas. Back in the day, Clyde was buddies with a local scumbag drug dealer named James Elmore Jr. Some way, somehow, Laura's father, Tim was put on to James Elmore as a potential suspect or someone who had involved in all this stuff that's going on over the course of four years. He met with Elmore 30 times, and Elmore had provided, on his own volition, enough information that was not public to make Tim really suspicious if he was involved in some way. According to a warrant issued for his arrest, Tim Miller told police that Elmore admitted to being present at night Laura Miller was killed. He said he had provided a vial of, like, cocaine that was contaminated or something that he knew was fatal to Clyde to be administered to Laura to kill her. That's his story.
>> Taylor: Thanks.
>> Farz: Tim also told police that Elmore had told him that he had acquired a house from Clyde years ago and there were bodies apparently buried there. These discussions were why detectives were visiting Clyde in the hospital and also what led to a grand jury indictment of both men. The one for Clyde became moot. They didn't do anything because he died. He committed suicide. He's out of the picture. So police moved against Elmore and arrested him on March 31, 2026, to charge him with manslaughter and Laura Miller's death. Dude, this is 40. What is it? 42 years ago, he was also implicated in the murder of a girl named Audrey Cook, along with, like, another guy who was also implicated, named Mark stalling. Audrey was 30 when she went missing in 1985 and was found on the same day as Laura was found. Clyde was never implicated for Audrey's murder, but Elmore was. I'm going to tell you more about this. There's a reason why I brought this Audrey person into this picture, because it all connects. It's weird. It's like the more you scrape under it, you're more like, and this guy knows that guy, and that guy knew this guy. I literally wrote down here. I was. I was like, dude, at 41 years of age. I don't have a single dirt bag friend. I probably haven't had a single dirtbag friend since college, you know, and that's my version of dirtbag. It's like the grimy guy who also, like, just sells weed and thinks he's the coolest guy. You know? Like, it's a. This guy does two future serial killers. He's friends on a first name basis, implicated across multiple affidavits and warrens and grand jury indictments, and both of them.
>> Taylor: I see. You're saying it's not. It's not a great friend group.
>> Farz: Yeah. And he's a serial killer. He's not a serial killer. He's just. He's a drug dealer. Like, his buddies are just these garbage people.
James Ellsworth Ellsmore is charged with tampering with evidence in Audrey Cook case
So back to Audrey Cook and how James Ellsworth Ellsmore is tied into this. So during a call with Tim Miller, Elmore said that Clyde burned down a house on a piece of property and buried bodies in the rubble. From what I originally gathered, I assumed the bodies were in the house and he set fire to them, and then they just kind of burned up whenever discovered. I'll clarify that here in a second because we learned a little bit more detail. The connection here is kind of tenuous, and investigators haven't revealed key details, but for some reason, Elmore's also indicated Audrey Cook's disappearance in so much as he was charged with tampering with evidence. So that's. That's what he actually got charged with in her situation. The best guess I can make here are that one body was in the house when it burned. Then someone, either Clyde or this Mark Stalin guy took Audrey Cook's body to the rubble and buried her underneath it with Elmore's help. Like, that's the info we have. Either way. Elmore was again arrested March 31, 2026. Mark, he's got to be like, 60 something. These guys aren't that old. That's what's crazy, is, like, these people like doing this stuff when they're like, 20.
>> Taylor: Yeah. Oh, God. Yeah.
>> Farz: People grow up fast, son. So Mark Stalling is almost certainly a serial killer because he's also implicated in the death of another girl named Donna Prudhomm. He was serving two life sentences on an unrelated kidnapping charge when in 2013, he confessed. Confessed to having picked up a woman going to a nearby hotel, doing drugs together, then choking her to death and dumping her in the field. In 2019, DNA forensics identified the woman he was describing as this Donna Prudhomme. Woman who's also a part of the Texas killing field bodies. So it's almost certain he killed her, given the information he had of the case. But it's also unlikely he'll ever be formally charged with her death or Audrey Cook's death, given the fact that he's already serving two life sentences to. Resources are tied. Like, why are we. Why charge this guy? Like, he's gonna die in jail anyways? We'll just let it. Let it go. Also, it's tied to a confession. He could just, like, go on the stand and say, I lied. So, yeah.
Robert William Abel is one of Tim Miller's pursuit suspects
Then we get to another of Tim Miller's pursuit suspects, and this is where Tim kind of becomes the bad guy, in my view. Like, I mean, he's doing a lot of good and he's done a lot of good, and he's been like, really, I don't know, admirable father in this whole situation. But he really, really got this one wrong by most people's estimation, and that's this poor b****** named Robert William Abel. And again, I alluded to him in part one because he's the Nassau scientist. Oh, okay, so quick, geography. Houston Space center is like, right next to League City. It's like four and a half miles from League City. And League City is where a cluster of these bodies are kind of falling or coming together on the i45 strip between Houston and Galveston.
>> Taylor: Makes us sure we're by the board. It's humid. Or by the water.
>> Farz: Exactly. Swamps, mosquitoes, giant roaches. That's all you need to know about that part of the world and NASA. Abel's background was in aerospace engineering. Again, I could not find an exact job title for what he did, but he worked on some pretty consequential things. His main project was working on the Saturn rockets, which. Quick history lesson. The Saturn rockets are the propulsion. Propulsion method of getting humans into space, specifically for the Apollo missions. Well, so he was pretty high up. He was actually high enough to where he was. I was literally trying to, like, do the math timeline wise on this. He was briefing Jim Lovell of Apollo 13 fame, played by Tom Hanks in the movie. Like, he was one of those guys. So when they were like, houston, we have a problem. I'm like, this guy was probably in that room and trying to solve this issue for them.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: And from what I gathered, research came. He was kind of confused on people because he really was not a. He didn't fit into a stereotype. And I think that partially disadvantaged him. His personality to people that knew him was Kind of like a redneck. Like, just, like, you would never know that he's one of the smartest men in the world. If you talk to him, you'd be like, he's just a hick. Like, he's inconsequential. In the 1980s, Abel had purchased land right next to where the bodies in the 1980s had been found. And then a few years after that, he leased another 11 acres, which is where bodies were actually then starting to be found. His whole intent of buying all this property and all this land was to start a business called Stardust Trail Rides to offer horseback rides to people that was doing a side hustle business. That's what he was trying to do.
>> Taylor: I hate horseback riding.
>> Farz: Yeah, I don't get it either. I really don't hate it.
>> Taylor: Like, it's.
>> Farz: I don't want to ride it.
>> Taylor: No, I like. Like, they're cool. Like, I think they're beautiful animals, but, like, absolutely not.
>> Farz: I don't want a minstrel horse, but I want. I want to, like, cuddle with it. I want to, like, have it sleep in bed with me. I don't want to, like, ride it, you know?
>> Taylor: My God, my poor daughter's allergic to horses. But I. Oh, we are going to see the equestrian shenanigans at the Olympics in two years.
>> Farz: No, that's fun. Really fun. I'm really jealous of you guys getting all those tickets. I heard that they're crazy expensive, by the way.
>> Taylor: A lot of money. And we're gonna random. But when? I don't know.
>> Farz: When you get a chance.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: Okay.
Police initially looked at Abel as a person of interest in the murders
Abel. So when he found out that all these bodies have been found on his land or adjacent to it in some cases, he offered up access to the land. He offered up access to his horses, to his backhoe, to whatever investigators want to help with investigation. And weirdly enough, that was kind of perceived as him being, like, suspicious, not helpful for some reason. This was also around the time where the profile of a serial killer is organized versus disorganized. Had really gained traction with law enforcement. And again, for. For, like, as a reminder, organized killers are socially competent. They're highly intelligent. They're meticulous in playing their crimes. Disorganizes, the opposite. And police looked at Abel, and they were like, this guy's a NASA scientist. Like, he's, like, crazy smart, crazy capable. He's being super helpful for some reason. Usually these guys should be weird recluses, but he's like, not. And that's weird. I think it was a little bit of, like, I don't know. Prejudice that, like, drew them to him.
>> Taylor: Like, what's. What's this guy's deal?
>> Farz: Yeah, yeah. And he's also off putting. Not off putting, but he's disarming. Because you talk to him, you're like, wait, what? You're smart. Like, you know what I mean? Like, that's also part of the prejudice, I think. They decided to look at him as a person of interest. They issued a warrant to search his home, and it revealed nothing. There's nothing going on. And police ultimately absolved him of any involvement in the crimes. Regardless, once it became known to the public that the police were looking into him, he was just an outcast. Like, he was just, like, shunned by everyone. There were stories about how people would, like, call him a murderer as they drove by his house or when they saw him at the grocery store. He had to shut his business because everybody was terrified of them, and nobody would go near. Near his business. And so, yeah, it was kind of depressing. It's kind of sad. Tim Miller contributed a lot to this. You look like you're going to say something.
>> Taylor: I do kind of want to say that I might go horseback riding at a suspected murderer's house if that was, like, part of the deal.
>> Farz: Okay, well, it's gonna be a niche business to Yelp, but I'm sure we could try and find it for you.
>> Taylor: I don't want to, but I'm saying that that doesn't make it. That makes it kind of fun because it can be kind of scary. I don't know.
>> Farz: Yeah. If it was like, a nighttime thing.
>> Taylor: Yeah. You know,
>> Farz: so Tim Miller really contributed to this because he did think that Abel had some involvement. I mean, he sort of seems like he's accusing a lot of folks, actually. And he harassed the out of Abel. He'd leave him threatening voicemails. He parked outside of his house and kind of glare on him. According to Miller himself, one time he pulled a gun and put it to Abel's head like he was going hard at this guy.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: Years later, Miller was convinced that Abel took no part in the murders and went to him and apologized for tormenting him. And by that point, Abel was. How old was he? 60? Yeah, he was 65 years old. He'd been living alone in complete isolation for six years. He had to leave the city. Like, he had to sell his land, his property, his house, everything, and, like, go live in the middle of nowhere.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: Yeah. It was really sad. And we don't know if he died by Suicide. But most people think he died by suicide. What ended up happening was he drove his golf cart onto some railroad tracks and then got hit by a train. But it's like, did the golf cart stall and then he didn't see the train? Or. Like, it sounds like he killed himself.
>> Taylor: Oh, that's terrible.
>> Farz: Yeah. What a bad way to go.
William Lewis Reese was a serial killer who killed four girls in four months
Then this is the last one we have William Lewis Reese, who is the most definitive of anybody, who has absolutely, for sure killed several of these people. He was a real serial serial killer. Like, there was no denying he was an actual serial killer. He is 66 years old right now. Again, it's so weird to me that this isn't. I'm not talking about, like, 200 years ago. It's 66 years old today.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: In 1986, he was caught for kidnapping and assaulting several women, given 25 years in prison, but ultimately only served 10 years and was released in 1996. The following year, he moved to Houston, and between April And August of 1997, he killed three girls who were part of the Texas killing field.
>> Taylor: Oh, my God.
>> Farz: That's not the worst of it, actually. He also was in Oklahoma when he killed. He went back and killed somebody else, another girl in Oklahoma. He killed four girls in four months.
>> Taylor: Wow.
>> Farz: Yeah. He was on a tear. He also looks really scary. Like, I don't know what it is about him, but when you look at pictures of him when he's, like, incarcerated, there's one of him being, like, surrounded by prison guards, and he just looks like a demon.
>> Taylor: Wait, what's his name again? Who are we talking about?
>> Farz: William Lewis Reese.
>> Taylor: Okay, continue.
>> Farz: There was one potential victim, a girl named Sandra Sapa, who escaped after an attempted attempted kidnapping and murder. Who would help? This is weird. They use, like, hypnosis to get her to remember his license plate number. And it worked, apparently.
>> Taylor: Whoa. It's cool.
>> Farz: And so police were able to find Rhys because of this girl, Sandra. He was extradited to Oklahoma for that one murder that happened there of the. That's not a part of the Texas killing field cases. He was found guilty and sentenced to death for that one. There was. Then he was taken back to Texas and convicted of the three killings that we know he did and sentenced to life in prison for those. As of January 2026, he had just, like, literally, just recently, he was extradited from Texas to go live on Oklahoma death row, which is where he is today.
>> Taylor: Got out for some reason.
>> Farz: Yeah, you would think, right? No, I think that guy, like, if you look at his picture. Like he looks like no parole officer is going to look at that guy and say, stamp rehabilitated on him. Yeah, he looks crazy. He looks like evil Santa Claus.
>> Taylor: He does look like evil. They don't, they don't make it not bad because they have him like chained up. So he like looks like a very guilty man, which he is.
>> Farz: He's like Steve Buscemi in Con Air.
>> Taylor: Yes.
>> Farz: And they wheel him out in a dolly.
>> Taylor: Yes.
>> Farz: So that's my story. I. Like I said, I have a bit of an addendum here which like doesn't totally. The reason why I covered the people that I covered is because there's linkage at every level either between the victims, the families, the killers, the scumbag drug dealer. Like there it's weird, it overlaps over and over and over again. And I thought that was really interesting from a narrative perspective that like all these people were kind of in this weird ooze together. But there's one that stands out again, the Jesus freak murders, which I want to go into. Maybe I'll give it a pause and circle back to it. But it is pretty fascinating. It is pretty interesting. It's cult related. Family disappearance, all that stuff. But yeah, I kind of want to maybe pivot to engineering disasters.
>> Taylor: Yeah, it sounds fun.
>> Farz: Yeah, we are. Maybe we were murdered out at this point.
>> Taylor: It's like a couple too many murders in a row is. Too many murders in a row. Yeah, a little bit like. I don't know. But no, that's interesting. I mean it's such a. Obviously like never. You should never hitchhike or like all those things, you know, but just there's so many towns, I'm sure all over the world where it's like, yep, people get murdered here, you know, nothing happens.
>> Farz: Yeah. The more remote, the more desolate, the more likely it happens.
>> Taylor: Yeah.
>> Farz: Which probably why like places like Texas has this situation and I'm sure, you know, is it Florida? Doesn't Florida have like the highway of Tears or something where it's just like truckers dumping dead girls?
>> Taylor: I think there's one in Washington state. Like. Yeah, they're kind of everywhere.
>> Farz: Yeah.
>> Taylor: On like those like lonely roads, you know, where you can dump a body really easily.
>> Farz: Yeah, so. So anyways, that's my story again. There might be a Part 2.5 addendum related. This cult related to this cult. But we'll see, we'll see. I might be murdered out for a little bit, but we'll see.
>> Taylor: We can take a break. Details later.
>> Farz: That's what I got Taylor.
>> Taylor: Cool. That's exciting.
Taylor: Any listener mail today? No, I think that's all I got
Thank you. I have one bit of news. While I was downloading photos for my last episode, I got a photo of the courthouse in Liverpool where Florence Maybrick was tried. And it's the same place that William Herbert Wallace was tried and you did that murder a couple years ago. He's a guy. He was another where like Lizzie Borden style. There's no way he did it. No way he didn't do it.
>> Farz: So yeah, it's all interconnected. We're part of the bloodstream. Sweet. Any listener mail today?
>> Taylor: No, I think that's all I got. But please send us emails the doomtop fell pod gmail.com and let us know if there's anything that we could do. I just told my friend. My friend was like I'm super interested in volcanoes. And I was like, well I have like seven I learned so much. So if you haven't listened to our seven episodes about volcanoes, go back, listen to those. Lots of stuff to listen to. And yes, find us on social media like us everywhere.
>> Farz: And please tell your friends we are going to be five episodes away from our 250th.
>> Taylor: Wow,
>> Farz: that's crazy. I know. We've been at this for a while. Well, yeah. Again, write to us doom to gmail dot com. Find us on the socials do default pod. Taylor, thank you.
>> Taylor: Thank you for us.
>> Farz: Go ahead and cut it off there.