Gone in a Blink

The Jamison Family Mystery: Vanished in the Oklahoma Wilderness

Gone in a Blink Season 3 Episode 38

A crisp autumn day in Oklahoma turns tragic when the Jamison family vanish without explanation, leaving behind $32,000 and their starving dog locked in their truck. What forces could lead a family of three to disappear in the remote Sandboi Mountains, only to be discovered as skeletal remains four years later?

The case of Bobby, Sherilyn, and six-year-old Madyson Jamison defies conventional explanation. Surveillance footage from the day they vanished captures the couple moving in trance-like states, walking back and forth to their vehicle without speaking, sometimes carrying nothing at all, sometimes the same items repeatedly. This haunting behavior, described by experts as appearing drug-induced, is just the first layer of strangeness surrounding their disappearance.

Delving deeper reveals a family struggling with chronic pain, mental illness, and increasingly bizarre beliefs. Their storage container home featured spray-painted warnings about witches and judgment. Sherilyn claimed to practice witchcraft, while Bobby sought special bullets to shoot the evil spirits he believed haunted their home. A Satanic Bible found in their possession and reports of seances add to the unsettling picture of their final days.

Most compelling are the conflicting clues – a vehicle left with thousands in cash yet missing a brown briefcase seen being loaded on camera; a family dog left locked inside a truck, slowly starving; and an 11-page letter expressing Sherilyn's hatred for her husband. Why would someone murder a family but leave behind $32,000? Was Sherilyn truly on a white supremacist cult's "hit list" as her mother believes?

The medical examiner could only declare their deaths "suspicious," leaving us to wonder what truly happened that October day. Was it murder, suicide, cult activity, or something else entirely? Join us as we examine every bizarre detail of this haunting Oklahoma mystery that continues to baffle investigators and true crime enthusiasts alike.


Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamison_family_deaths

https://www.utdailybeacon.com/opinion/columns/killer-conversations-the-jamison-family-murders/article_f47e91a0-0d79-11eb-b8ef-9f3fa837bc9c.html

https://www.ladbible.com/news/us-news/mystery-jamison-family-vanished-mountains-oklahoma-308084-20241016

https://buzzfeed-unsolved.fandom.com/wiki/The_Disturbing_Mystery_of_the_Jamison_Family

https://medium.com/@dellantonio.caterina/and-yet-no-answer-e17fbe4bf7af

Music: 

Crime Trap by Muza Production

Things that Live in the Cellar by Geoff Harvey

Gone in a Blink is created by Heather Hicks and Danielle E.
Written and produced by Heather Hicks and hosted by Danielle E. and Heather Hicks.
Gone in a Blink theme: Crime Trap created and produced by Muzaproduction

We would love to hear from you!
Follow us on social media:
Instagram @ Goneinablinkpod
Facebook @ Gone in a Blink podcast
YouTube @ Goneinablinkpodcast@goneinablink

Email us with comments and/or ideas for an episode at goneinablinkpod@gmail.com

Thanks for joining us on the airwaves. And remember......Be Safe, Be Smart, and Try Not to Blink.

Speaker 1:

A family of three head out into a rural area near Red Oak, oklahoma, to look at some land they were considering to purchase. It's a cool, crisp fall day and the leaves are in full transition to the orange, red and yellow hues that represent autumn. It's a very desolate area with very little human interaction. Upon arrival, bobby Jameson, his wife Sherilyn and their six-year-old daughter, Madison, exit the family's white pickup truck From there. The events that follow remain unclear. However, the tragic end to three lives forever lost and the mystery that has surrounded this family's bizarre disappearance for more than a decade raise more questions than answers. And just when you think things can't get any stranger, it does. This is the case into the disappearance of the Jameson family. And this is Gone in a Blink. Hey, true crime fans, I'm your host, heather, and I'm Danielle. Welcome to episode 38 of Gone in a Blink. We are almost 40 episodes into Gone in a Blink. We are almost 40 episodes into Gone in a Blink, and with that I want to say thank you to all of our dedicated listeners and for spreading the word about our show to others.

Speaker 1:

When we started this podcast back in late 2023, I'll be quite honest we weren't really sure what we were doing or how to go about doing it. We knew that we wanted to do something relating to missing persons and true crime and, more importantly, we wanted to help people get their stories out there. All too often when people go missing, the cases that are not covered by mainstream media get overlooked. Some cases never receive any kind of attention whatsoever. We are trying to help bring those cases to light. While we do mix up our cases and try to throw a variety of them into our show, it's important that we continue to help be the voice for the many people whose stories have been left untold. So today's case is one out of Eufaula, oklahoma. Today we are talking about the strange and mysterious death of the Jameson family, so if you're ready, let's jump right in.

Speaker 1:

Bobby Jameson met Sherilyn in 2002, and he pretty much knew right away that he wanted to spend the rest of his life with Sherilyn. A short while later, sherilyn learned that she was pregnant and by August 2003, she gave birth to the couple's baby girl, who they named Madison Stormy Starr. A year later, bobby and Sherilyn got married and the family decided to call Eufaula their home, and for geographical purposes, eufaula is approximately 123 miles, or 198 kilometers east of Oklahoma City, oklahoma, and it's a pretty small town with a population of fewer than 3,000 people of fewer than 3,000 people. Not long after the couple settled into their home with Madison, bobby was involved in a terrible car accident that left him with chronic back pain and the inability to walk or stand for extended periods of time. Because of this, he was unable to find a job.

Speaker 1:

Sherilyn was battling mental health issues, including severe bipolar disorder. This kept her from being able to hold down a regular job. Her mental health became even worse in 2007 when her little sister, maria, was stung on the tongue by a bee and, as a result, maria went into anaphylactic shock and soon died. Due to the couple's instability and health issues, they were forced to rely on the aid of public assistance. Sherilyn also had a son from a previous relationship named Colton. Colton lived with his mom and Bobby until he turned 12 years old. Then, in July of 2009, he decided that he wanted to live with his bio dad, so he packed up and moved to Oklahoma City. That he wanted to live with his bio dad, so he packed up and moved to Oklahoma City. This move destroyed Sherilyn, even though Colton wasn't really that far away and she was still able to talk with her son on a frequent basis. She had a really really hard time dealing with him being away, and this caused her mental health to further suffer.

Speaker 1:

It was around this time also that the Jamisons made the decision to pull six-year-old Madison out of public school and instead homeschool her Around. This time, the family had been looking to purchase a 40-acre plot of land approximately 30 miles or 48 kilometers from Eufaula, near Red Oak. This is a very isolated area, which actually worked for them, because they didn't really like socializing with a lot of other people anyway and kind of just wanted to be off the grid. But they weren't planning to build a house or anything on this 40 acre plot. Instead, they were going to live in a storage container that they already owned on their property in Eufaula and, to be quite honest, I thought this was rather bizarre, considering there is not a lot of room in a storage container for one person, let alone a family of three, and I will post a pic of the actual storage container on our Facebook page. But it is basically a long, narrow container, almost like a shipping container, really. I think that's what it technically is. They were going to live in it.

Speaker 1:

So on October 8th 2009, the family hopped into their white pickup and traveled approximately 30 miles out to Red Oak. It was reported that they were planning to meet up with the individual that was going to sell them the plot of land. However, that has never actually been confirmed. So in the truck with them was their dog, maisie. They reached the area where the plot of land was located, which was deep in the Sandboy Mountains, and a man living in the mountains actually confirmed that he did in fact see the family out there. However, this would be the last time that anyone would see the family alive. On October 16th 2009, a local hunter stumbled upon the Jameson's pickup truck. Police were called and inside the truck they discovered Bobby's wallet, sherilyn's purse, some cell phones, an envelope containing $32,000, and, more importantly, the family's dog, maisie. Maisie was malnourished and barely alive, having survived by eating her own feces.

Speaker 1:

The following day, hundreds of volunteers, along with police, began searching the mountains for the missing family. That search grew bigger and more widespread, however, as the days passed, with still no sign of the Jamisons. So they basically went out here to meet the person that was going to sell them the land and then just completely disappeared the whole family. So when police arrived at the Jamison's home, they noticed the big storage container in the front yard. It's huge, you can't even miss it and the container had several phrases spray painted on the outside. One of the phrases stated, quote only God can judge. Gossip is a sin, unquote. Another phrase read quote three cats killed to date by people in the area. Witches don't like it when their black cats are killed, unquote.

Speaker 2:

So you're saying that these quotes were not on the storage container before they went missing? This was only discovered after they went missing. No, these quotes were on the storage container before they went missing. This was only discovered after they went missing.

Speaker 1:

No, these quotes were on the container before they went missing. But when the police went to the house after they went missing is when they discovered it. But no, the family actually wrote this on the container.

Speaker 2:

So the family wrote this on the container. That almost seems like a little bit of a twist there. I was under the impression that it was going in the direction that they had found this and this could maybe lead to some clues. But you're saying the family wrote this.

Speaker 1:

Yes, and this will be explained, as odd as it sounds, a little later in the story, although it will still sound batshit crazy. There's a lot of things that keep occurring and a lot more comes out as the story unfolds to make this even more bizarre than it started with. On November 16th 2013, so four years after the Jamesons disappeared, some hunters were out in the area when they stumbled on the skeletal remains of what appeared to be two adults and one child. The remains were found just three miles or 4.8 kilometers away from where the Jameson's truck was found. Further search of the area uncovered shoes, pieces of clothing, adult teeth, part of an adult arm and leg bone fragments, and that part had me kind of stumped in a way, because they searched that area before. They searched that area as soon as they were notified that the Jameson family were missing. So I'm not quite sure how, four years later, they come upon all of this Now.

Speaker 1:

Authorities are saying that they might have missed it because there were fallen leaves that could have covered up the remains. And while I understand that, if the bodies were so decomposed and you hit that point, understand that if the bodies were so decomposed and you hit that point, because four years later you're going to hit that point where they are very well decomposed by then. But when they did the initial search they would not have been that decomposed, so they would actually still pretty much being intact for the most part, I would think. But I don't know. Leaves aren't to me. Leaves are not going to cover up an entire body. They will cover up possibly bone fragments and things like that. I mean, what do you think about that?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that sounds pretty odd. I would have thought exactly how you feel that when they first looked at that they would have been able to find something, and leaves aren't going to cover it solely. I guess where my mind was going as well if they discovered all this four years later but they didn't discover it with their initial search. Could there be a fourth person involved?

Speaker 1:

There could very well be a fourth person involved, and that's what's so strange. There's a lot of theories that we'll go over in a bit about who that fourth person may or may not have been. So on July 3rd 2014, after using anthropological and forensic pathological testing, oklahoma State Medical Examiner Dr Joshua Lanter confirmed that the remains were that of Bobby Jamison, his wife Sherilyn and six-year-old Madison. He stated in his report that the cause and manner of death were unknown due to the amount of decomposition and the fact that the skeletal remains were incomplete. He stated that there was no evidence of trauma, although he could not completely rule that out due to the incomplete remains. His final report stated that the deaths occurred under suspicious circumstances.

Speaker 1:

So one of the most talked about and extremely creepy aspects of this case is the footage from the family's surveillance camera from the day they disappeared. This was time stamped on the day they left their house. In the footage, the couple appeared to be almost in a trance-like state, as if they were sleepwalking kind of, and they made several trips between their truck and their house. It was described that at times they were making several trips back and forth carrying the same thing. Other times they would go back and forth carrying nothing at all, and often they would both just stop at the same time in between these trips and just stare into space for what appeared to be no reason, and then they would start walking again. They never appear to be talking to each other and authorities actually turned the video over to a behavioral expert who immediately believed that it appeared the couple were under the influence of some sort of drug, and you can actually find the footage of this online, and I did. However, the video pauses at each frame, so it's just a video that goes frame by frame by frame, so you're not really seeing the full effect of what investigators described. So I'm thinking that the actual footage is more continuous, because what you're going to find online or what I found maybe someone else will find something else that is more in tune with what investigators describe, but what I found? You cannot tell that they're stopping to stare off into space and you cannot tell really that they're walking in a trance-like state, because it just is playing frame by frame, if that makes sense.

Speaker 1:

The video also shows Sherilyn place a brown briefcase into the vehicle. Former Latimer County Sheriff Israel Buchamp believes that this briefcase could hold a major clue in this case, however, strangely enough it was not in the truck with everything else that had been recovered and in fact to this day it still has never been recovered. Officers observed the fact that the Jameson's truck showed no evidence of any kind of struggle. Latimer County Sheriff Buchamp later stated, quote I think they were forced to stop and got out of the truck to meet with someone they recognize and I think they either left of their own free will or by force, unquote.

Speaker 1:

One other important item missing from the truck besides the brown briefcase was a .22 caliber handgun registered to Sherilyn. This also has never been recovered, has never been recovered. So I thought that was kind of strange too, that the video shows her putting a brown briefcase into the truck. Yet that was not found, nor was the gun. So whatever happened to them must have involved someone getting into the vehicle and taking the briefcase, or they went and dropped it off somewhere. I don't know. That's a huge mystery.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that seems kind of odd. I think also the brown briefcase would be for important things, obviously, but yet the $32,000 wasn't in there, it was still in the truck.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's strange too. So that makes me think they may have dropped off the briefcase somewhere or to someone so much like any case like this. There are many theories into what might have happened to the Jameson family, and with each theory the case just keeps getting stranger and stranger. So the first theory we'll dive into is the thought that maybe the family got lost in the woods and died of hypothermia. I feel like this theory could be shot down pretty quickly, though, simply for the fact that it was reported that temperatures for that area during that time only got down into the 40s for a low, so it wasn't like crazy cold. And then there is still the fact that the bodies were found just a mere 2.7 miles or 4.35 kilometers from the truck. I mean, I guess they could have gotten lost and not realized they were that close to the truck. That's possible, but I really don't think that is one of the more likely scenarios.

Speaker 2:

No, it's not sounding like it. I kind of feel like, if they intentionally went into the woods as well, that they would have brought their dog with them too.

Speaker 1:

I would have also thought that they would have brought the dog, and that makes me lean more to the fact that maybe, or the thought that maybe they were forced to get out of the truck, or they had only planned on getting out of the truck for just a minute or two, because the child is with them but the dog is not, so I don't know Sounds. I mean, if someone was forcing them to get out of the truck, I don't feel like they would have been like take the dog too. The next theory is that it was a murder-suicide, and this was actually. This was actually my first thought about this case. During the investigation, police found an 11-page letter inside the truck that appeared to be a hate letter written by Sherilyn to her husband Bobby. In the letter she talks about how she hates being married to him, that he acts like a hermit and that she was considering divorce.

Speaker 1:

I'm not so sure anymore that this was in fact a murder-suicide I did it first but there's no mention of a gun that was ever found near the bodies, and that's a big deal. And Sherilyn's handgun is still missing. So I mean, common sense kind of tells you, unless somebody came along and found the gun and took it. That's a possibility, though, I guess. So I don't know. I don't know that I feel that one happened either. I mean, what do you think about that?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's a tough one. I mean it is a possibility, but yeah, I really feel like that they would have recovered the gun in the midst of the search.

Speaker 1:

Another theory into the Jamesons' disappearance is that Bobby's father, bob Dean Jameson, had something to do with the family's deaths. Right before the family disappeared, bobby was involved in a lawsuit with his father, claiming that Bob had made threats towards Bobby and that he had struck him with his car in November 2008. Bobby also made claims against his father that he was involved in meth, prostitutes, gangs and other criminal activity. Bobby had also filed a protective order against his dad, stating that Bob was a very dangerous man and that the family was afraid for their lives. This protective order was eventually dismissed on May 18, 2009, less than three months before the Jamisons went missing. Bobby and his father, bob, shared a pretty estranged relationship, to say the least, and this carried on until the time that the Jamison family disappeared. Bob Dean had owned a gas station, apparently at one time, where he and Bobby worked together and half of the gas station's earnings were to go to Bobby. However, bobby stated that Bob never paid him for his work. I'm not even sure how people still consider this a theory, though, because it had been reported that Bob Jameson died approximately two months before the Jamesons disappeared. So, unless he had orchestrated some sort of plan before that to have the family killed. I don't think this theory has a leg to stand on, and he was never considered a suspect in this case. Anyway, that could be because he was already dead.

Speaker 1:

Then there's the theory that the Jamesons were murdered by a cult. So Sherilyn's mother, connie, firmly believes that the family were murdered by a religious cult, and Connie stated in an article in BuzzFeed that her daughter, sherilyn, was on a hit list that belonged to a specific cult. According to an episode of the investigative discovery show called Disappeared, sherilyn's best friend, nikki Chennauld, stated that she had received a phone call from an anonymous woman who claimed to have once been part of a white supremacy group. She claimed that the group kept a book that contained a hit list of names of individuals who had created problems for the group. Sherilyn's name was on that list, along with many other people who had gone missing, and cults were known to have been an active thing, especially in the area where the Jamisons disappeared.

Speaker 2:

I wonder could the Jamison family have been a part of this cult? Just from what you've said so far about finding the shipping container and the verbiage on there, I think that's a strong possibility and you know I mean it's anyone's guess.

Speaker 1:

But there were also reports that they had dabbled into things such as witchcraft and Sherilyn had professed to neighbors that she was in fact a witch.

Speaker 1:

I'm sure not all people that profess themselves as being witches are part of a cult, but it's a possibility that they were dabbling in things like that and this would explain the graffiti she spray painted on the outside of the storage container about witches not liking when their black cats go missing.

Speaker 1:

According to Sherilyn's friend, nikki, sherilyn believed that her neighbors were trying to poison her cats. Sherilyn spray painted the message on the container in her yard as a way to scare the neighbors into thinking that she was a witch. After that the neighbors pretty much stayed away from the Jamesons. So keep in mind too, sherilyn was dealing with mental health issues pretty bad that just kept getting worse and worse. So I'm sure that kind of played into a lot of stuff. Whether or not her neighbors were actually poisoning her cats I don't know, but the neighbors decided just to stay away from the family. So also, a satanic bible was found in the Jamesons' home and there were reports that Sherilyn would take part in such things as seances and things like that. Now Nikki says I think Nikki was taking part in those too. But Nikki says it was just all fun and games, that they didn't believe in that stuff, they were just playing around and that could be a possibility. A lot of people do things like that just for fun, not really putting much stock into it. I don't know that this family was one of those people that just kind of did it as fun and games. I don't know.

Speaker 1:

But according to Sheriff Buchamp, the family definitely had an obsession with the dead and at one point the family believed that their house was haunted with evil spirits. Bobby went to their church pastor Gary Brandon and asked him about special bullets that could be used to shoot evil spirits. The evil spirits were supposedly that of two children that lived there prior, named Emily and Michael, who had befriended their daughter Madison. Madison would have conversations with the spirits. According to Nikki, when Bobby couldn't get any help from Pastor Gary, bobby obtained the Satanic Bible in an effort to perform an exorcism on the spirits himself. Nikki believes that there were actually evil spirits in the Jamesons' home and that Sherilyn once told her that Bobby had a few episodes where his eyes suddenly went black and he lunged at her in a threatening manner. So make of this what you will.

Speaker 1:

There was also an incident worth mentioning regarding a man by the name of Kenneth Bellows. An incident worth mentioning regarding a man by the name of Kenneth Bellows. Apparently, bellows was an acquaintance of the couple who had recently moved into the Jameson house to help the family with some handiwork around the house. Now I that is the first big no-no, in my opinion. In true crime, never let a strange man move into your home, especially when you have children, or at all, but especially when you have children, in this case, a six-year-old child. It's something that, more times than not, will not end well. So it turned out that this man was part of a white supremacy group, whatever, and he found out that Sherilyn's ancestors were Native American. Sherilyn was very proud of that, as she should be, but it was reported that after engaging with Sherilyn one day about her ancestors, bellows gets fired up and tells her that it would be better if she were dead, because he stated that those who are not white don't deserve to live. Those were his words, so it's pretty sick stuff. So apparently he had grabbed her before saying this and refused to let go. And she eventually manages to break free and she grabs Madison and runs to the bedroom and a short while later she comes back with her .22 caliber pistol and fires shots into the ground near where Bellows is standing and tells him to get out of the

Speaker 1:

house. So it goes without saying that this family has been involved with some pretty strange things. Sherilyn's mental health was taking a toll and, according to her mother, her behavior in the months leading up to the family's death just kept getting more strange. There was even an incident where she was riding with her daughter to Oklahoma City when Sherilyn just pulled over and demanded that her mother get out of the car. When Sherilyn just pulled over and demanded that her mother get out of the car, I'm unsure of what led up to that moment, but Sherilyn's mental health was definitely struggling. So obviously there are several theories into this case. No one knows exactly what happened, but there are many theories. Some are a little more far-fetched than others, but what is your take on all the theories that we've discussed so far and what may or may not be more likely to have happened?

Speaker 2:

Well, definitely that there's a lot of good theories. What you've mentioned about the cult activity, I think could be very likely that they were dabbling in cult and with Sherilyn's mental health I wonder if that started to cause trouble for the colt. And just you know, you had said she had bipolar, so you never know, like how her behavior is going to be if she's going to lash out at somebody, and so I was thinking of that theory as you were talking. But also when you mentioned the guy that came and moved into the home, I kind of feel like there's our fourth person, that it very likely could be him.

Speaker 2:

But I guess what's a mystery for me in all of this is one the dog, the poor little guy, was in the car, as if they thought they were going to be coming back to the car. Because I feel like if they thought, okay, this is our spot, or we're going to be out back to the car, because I feel like if they thought, okay, this is our spot, or we're going to be out for a little while, that they would have had the dog come with them and then also the $32,000. If it was any kind of like robbery or someone that knew that they had it. I feel like that would have been gone. We know it wasn't in the briefcase, but I guess that maybe they hid it someplace really well in the car. If it was a robbery, they would have looked for that. But this fourth person if that's the theory, then maybe not. Maybe their goal was to kill the family.

Speaker 1:

Well, and the car was found locked and I think that is extremely strange, because if they were forced out of the car, why would they lock it? But at the same time, if they were getting out of the car to meet with someone, why would they leave the dog in there and lock it unless they were meeting with someone? And it was only for a moment and they knew they had that money in there. I could see them locking it because of the money. If they were only going to be a short while, so maybe, but then they had the keys on them. So if someone, if someone shot them or killed them, why wouldn't they get the keys? You would think that they would want to get into the car and see what they could take out of the vehicle. They wouldn't just leave, I would figure. I mean, it's all really strange Locking the car, leaving the dog in the car, $32,000 in the car, but the briefcase and what was in the briefcase?

Speaker 1:

That's my big thing. You would think the $32,000 would have been in the briefcase, right. But then, like I mentioned, who really walks around with money in a briefcase? That's kind of movie like. But I don't know. Nothing makes sense in this entire case. There's no logic.

Speaker 2:

It almost reminds me of kind of like a Facebook market transaction, to where you're meeting someone to exchange and it sounds like the whole family got out except for the dog. They locked the car, talking with the person first and then was going to go back in to exchange the $32,000. And so maybe a ploy to get them out there. I mean, there's so many possibilities of who that kind of the fourth person could be or of what happened. I just kind of thought, okay, with the Colt situation, to kind of lure them out there in a secluded area. They thought they were getting something and brought the $32,000, but really it was because they wanted to kill them, like I was saying. Like, unless the goal is to rob them in this case, if that's, you know the scenario, because there's so many scenarios it sounds like that it was. It was to kill them.

Speaker 1:

It definitely, definitely does sound like that. It does sound like that, but the $32,000 was still in there, so they, as far as we know, they got away with nothing except murder, and that's why I'm leaning towards the cult theory, because that's what a cult or a satanic cult in this situation would be after.

Speaker 2:

They wouldn't be concerned necessarily about the money. They're concerned with a killing.

Speaker 1:

Well, and that was definitely the direction that Sherilyn's mother is going with this and I mean Sherilyn's on a hit list. They have a hit list and several people have gone missing, apparently reportedly from this hit list. Several people have gone missing, apparently reportedly from this hit list, so who knows if it was just Sherilyn that was on the hit list and Bobby and Madison were collateral damage because they were there, which makes sense too right? I don't know, but there are still so many questions of how an entire family goes missing and the only survivor is the family dog. Investigators continue to search for clues into their bizarre disappearance in the hopes of one day bringing closure to the family that remain. As for their dog, macy, she is doing well and has since been adopted by Sherilyn's mother, connie.

Speaker 1:

If you have any information into the deaths of Bobby, sherilyn or Madison Jameson, please contact the Latimer County Sheriff's Office at area code 918-465-2161. Thank you for listening to another episode of Gone in a Blink. If you like our show, please consider giving us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts or on Spotify and for all the latest updates, photos and case info, please consider following us on any of our social media sites and I will post those links in our show notes and if you have an idea for a case you'd like us to cover, drop us an email at goneinablinkpod at gmailcom. And please remember, be safe, be smart and try not to blink.

People on this episode