Episode Transcript
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0:01
Bridgewater is a production of iHeart Radio
0:03
three D audio and Grim and Mild from
0:05
Aaron Bankey. Headphones recommended
0:08
for a full exposure. Listen with headphones.
0:11
Listener discretion advised. Once
0:20
we've finished circling the whole lake, I'll
0:22
officially have done every trail of Freetown.
0:26
And why do you like doing this? Come
0:29
on, look at this place. It's gorgeous
0:32
mother nature and all our splendor. Sure,
0:35
if you like that sort of thing, trust
0:38
me, it'll grow on you. I
0:40
just see endless trees. Central
0:42
Park had plenty of those. I don't need miles and
0:44
miles of it. Okay,
0:46
But what Central Park haunted?
0:50
No way, Freetown State
0:52
Forest is hella haunted.
0:55
People see all sorts of weird stuff in here.
0:58
I mean, take this, like, apparently
1:01
in the seventies they found blood and
1:03
strange symbols all over this rock cliff.
1:06
A lot of it has been covered over in graffiti now,
1:08
but if you look closely, you can still
1:10
see some carvings. And they
1:12
say when it rains, the
1:15
rocks get slick with red, like
1:17
they're weeping blood. See
1:20
right right up there, I think you can see
1:22
some carvings. Oh yeah,
1:25
there, Look Uh,
1:29
dude, where'd you go? No,
1:33
seriously, you're freaking me out. Okay,
1:36
this isn't Bunny Daniel, damn
1:43
it. You scared me. You shouldn't
1:45
mess around with this stuff. What
1:49
is it? All right?
1:53
I think I found something? Okay,
2:39
come on in, settle down and find a seat. I
2:42
see we have some more folks in class today.
2:44
It's maybe a few seniors who remembered
2:47
that they need a history class to graduate.
2:49
Perhaps, well, you're
2:51
in the right place. Folklore
2:54
and Fact an exploration
2:57
into unusual America a
3:00
pretty interesting way to get a history credit, if I do
3:02
say so myself. Now,
3:04
don't worry if you're just joining us. You didn't
3:06
miss anything too important in the first
3:08
class. We just had the chance circle and
3:11
the blood packed. But if
3:13
you can promise me your firstborn, I can promise
3:15
you that you'll get a passing grade. Soundfair,
3:19
okay, But in all seriousness, the reading list
3:21
that I handed out in the last class is online,
3:24
and you can just let me or my t a VIP
3:26
and vipp and stand up. Let
3:29
us know if you have a hard time
3:31
chasing down any of the texts. Actually, don't
3:33
let me know. Let Vippen know. Okay,
3:36
so folklore and
3:39
fact. Why we're all
3:41
here? I see a couple of familiar faces from last
3:43
semester's witchcraft class. High couldn't
3:45
get enough of the occult? Huh,
3:47
Well, I get it. I have dedicated
3:50
my life to this stuff because human beings,
3:53
we are fascinated by the strange and
3:55
the unusual, the inexplicable.
3:58
We like to get into the dark and the
4:00
cobb corners of our world. Scary stories
4:02
and urban myths and folklore and all of
4:04
these things. They're there
4:06
because they they help us explore
4:09
the gruesome truths of humanity
4:11
in a safe environment, because
4:14
stories can't hurt us.
4:17
Now, some might argue that ghosts
4:20
and monsters can hurt us, but the veracity
4:22
of folklore isn't important,
4:25
because, of course none of it is true. And I realized
4:27
that might be a disappointment to some of you. But no, this
4:29
class is not going to be an exploration into
4:31
the validity of any supernatural claims.
4:34
This is an academic class. Our
4:37
pursuit this semester is
4:39
not paranormal, but
4:42
anthropological. What can
4:44
legends throughout time tell us about
4:46
history? About people? Why did the sale of which
4:49
trials happen? In that time, and in
4:51
that place, and with those people. Why
4:53
is Area fifty one such an enticing
4:56
mystery for Americans in the twentieth
4:58
century and the twenty one century. Why do people
5:00
of southeastern Massachusetts believe
5:03
that this area is a magnet
5:05
for supernatural activity? That's
5:08
right, Our first topic this
5:10
semester starts right here in Bristol
5:12
County. Four decades
5:15
this area has been a hotbed
5:17
for paranormal sightings, everything from Bigfoot
5:19
and UFOs to cult activity and
5:22
animal sacrifice. In the nineteen seventies,
5:24
there was a renowned cryptozoologist,
5:27
Lauren Coleman, who gave this other worldly
5:29
corner of southeastern Massachusetts
5:32
its other name, the Bridgewater
5:35
Triangle. I'm
5:38
sure most of you have heard of the Bermuda
5:40
Triangle. It's a large patch of
5:42
the ocean where boats have gone missing and
5:44
wormholes have been reported an alien spotted.
5:47
The Bridgewater Triangle is similar,
5:50
though it's much smaller in scope. It comprises
5:53
about two square miles. We've got towns,
5:55
we've got wilderness, couple of farms, but our
5:57
triangle has a greater variety
5:59
of sightings and happenings. So
6:02
if you can think of a bit of folklore
6:05
or paranormal legend. Chances are someone
6:07
has reported experiencing it in
6:09
the Bridgewater Triangle. Go ahead,
6:12
draw something out. What have you got? Uh?
6:14
Ghosts child's play? Of course,
6:17
more than that can count alien
6:19
abduction. H seventies
6:21
chock full of of UFOs, which
6:24
is ditto with the Satanic rituals
6:26
in the woods. Seventies
6:29
were a very interesting time. Come
6:31
on, we're splashing in the shallow end here. Let's let's get
6:33
to the weird stuff. Come on, what have you got? Give me your best
6:35
shot? Basilisks? Basilisks?
6:39
Now we're talking not really no vasilisks,
6:42
but there have been several settings of giant snakes,
6:45
some of which were actually verified
6:47
as giant snakes. What
6:49
all right? What else? Fairies? Good?
6:52
No, no fairies. Strictly speaking,
6:54
though, there have been plenty of encounters with strange,
6:57
small humanoid creatures luring
7:00
unsuspecting hikers into the woods.
7:02
It sounds like the workings of the Fay Realm
7:05
to me. Now, for the next
7:07
several weeks, we're going to be looking at all of
7:09
these and more. Given
7:12
the diversity of the supernatural activity
7:14
and this part of the country, we're going to be
7:17
using the Bridgewater Triangle as a framework
7:19
to study specific legends and to
7:21
talk about how they made their way
7:24
into this area and into the fabric
7:26
of the local culture. Not to mention
7:28
we live here, so it's going to be
7:31
a little bit more fun, yes,
7:34
Professor Bradshaw. Yeah,
7:36
Mike, Mike. What
7:39
about disappearances? Uh,
7:41
Well, as with most of these places,
7:43
the paranormal activity in this area is largely
7:46
just fabricated and harmless.
7:49
Bigfoot isn't going around murdering people,
7:52
but people have disappeared.
7:56
Yes, it's a large area.
7:58
All sorts of crime have happened, disappearances,
8:01
kidnappings, accidents,
8:03
murders. Yeah, it's
8:05
often easier for people to blame that on
8:08
ghosts or cults or
8:10
uh or giant snakes.
8:14
But that psychological impulse, that
8:17
is something that we will be studying in
8:19
depth. Your dad went
8:21
missing, right, excuse
8:24
me in Freetown, State
8:26
Forest. I grew up here and my grandma
8:28
never let me go hiking because of a cop that
8:30
disappeared. In the seventies, Have you said
8:32
that's when a lot of weird stuff was happening. Um,
8:37
yeah, yeah, yeah. Every every
8:39
semester always has one local
8:41
who's up on the on the family legend. Yes,
8:46
my father did go missing when I was a child,
8:48
and it was related to some cult
8:51
activity. There's nothing supernatural.
8:53
It was just your just your
8:55
run of the mill seventies satanic group. They
8:58
murdered him. Uh no,
9:00
I can't say that his body was never found. It's
9:02
a cold case. But well,
9:05
forty years go by and you assume the guy isn't coming
9:07
back. Okay, thank
9:09
you. Now that we've gotten past that little
9:11
bit of history, it's still
9:14
a cold case, even with
9:16
the badge they found. I'm
9:18
sorry the cops
9:20
they found a badge in the woods a few days ago,
9:23
the day before yesterday. I think, I'm
9:26
okay, I'm what what are
9:28
you talking about? I read about it on Reddit
9:31
and where I read it? Yeah, there's a
9:33
whole Bridgewater Triangle subreddit.
9:36
Okay, what was it saying? There's
9:38
someone who posts a lot whose girlfriend
9:41
or boyfriend or something works for the police, and
9:43
they said they found your dad's old police
9:45
badge in the woods. They might open
9:47
up the case again. Huh. I had
9:49
not heard anything about that. What
9:52
do you think happened to him? I
9:54
think that reddit is about as reliable
9:57
as reports of the UFOs, right,
10:01
well, Mike, that was an interesting diversion.
10:04
Let's let's get back to the task
10:06
at hand, shall we. Yeah,
10:40
Hello, hey, mom
10:43
oh Jeremy, what a what a pleasant surprise?
10:45
Hi? Um? Have you
10:47
gotten a call from the Freetown police? What?
10:50
No? No? Is everything? Okay? Are you? Are
10:52
you okay? No? No, I'm fine,
10:55
I'm fine. It's just Um,
10:58
there was a kid in my lecture today.
11:00
Oh oh, of course your semesters
11:03
to get how is it going? Um,
11:06
it's fine whatever, That's not why I
11:08
called. One of my students said that they found
11:10
Dad's badge in the woods. Mom
11:15
Um, Well, what exactly
11:19
do you mean when they closed
11:21
Dad's case, did they find anything, any
11:23
evidence of a body or anything. You
11:25
know, your father is dead, right, he died
11:28
forty years ago, Mom, I know.
11:30
But did the station ever give you any
11:33
of his personal effects. We got
11:35
the things from his locker at the station, an
11:37
extra uniform, a picture, he kept, a view
11:40
and his badge wasn't in there. No.
11:42
I assumed it was on and when he went missing, and
11:45
you haven't heard anything. No one tried to
11:47
get in touch with you. It was a long
11:49
time ago. It doesn't change anything.
11:52
I know, I know it doesn't. I
11:55
just would
11:57
just be nice to have. He'll
12:06
just be a moment. Thank you.
12:09
Can I get you anything? Water? Coffee?
12:12
Wow? Full service around here? Slow
12:15
day? Right? Mr
12:18
Bradshaw? Yes, hello,
12:20
are you Captain Haddock? Please call
12:22
me Martin? Right, Martin, you're
12:25
Thomas Bradshaw's boy. That's right. He
12:28
was a very good man. You're dad. I've only
12:30
been on the Force of Gear when he went missing. You
12:32
found something? Yes, yes,
12:34
we did. Come on through. Please
12:40
take a scene.
12:44
Did you really find my father's badge? Yeah?
12:47
Yeah we did. Why was I not informed?
12:50
Oh? We had to put it through evidence and processing verify
12:52
it was his talkular witnesses. So
12:54
what did happen? Who found it? A couple
12:57
of hikers? It was just under asson at ledge.
13:00
That's the one that's by the water, right, yep.
13:03
What else did they find? Nothing?
13:05
Just the badge must have washed up in the recent storm.
13:08
Right. So now
13:11
that we've processed it, you're welcome to
13:13
it. Well, uh, thank
13:16
you, thank you, Martin. No problem.
13:18
I'm sorry that I don't not more to tell you. That's okay.
13:20
I wasn't actually expecting anything. It'll
13:22
be good to have a little piece of them. Yeah,
13:25
that's all right, I will see
13:27
myself out. Thank you, have a good day's
13:30
son yep YouTube.
13:37
What the hell excuse
13:41
me, Mr Bradshawn. No, I was just in there, I
13:43
know, but the Captain has just got into a meeting. Is there
13:45
something I can help you with? What the
13:47
hell is this? I'm sorry, sir, I
13:49
don't see this badge is pristine.
13:52
Okay, it's forty years old
13:55
and they just found it in the woods. Once it
13:57
was processed through evidence, they cleaned it off.
13:59
For you, what they cleaned it off?
14:01
How they clean it off with a time machine? Look at
14:03
this? That badge looks
14:06
practically brand new. If it's been in the forest
14:08
for four decades, then why is there nowhere
14:10
and tear. There's no erosion, there's no decay
14:13
leather and metal, and there's no mold, no
14:15
rust. That he's
14:18
odd. Yeah, I need to talk to Captain
14:20
Haddock. I'm sorry, sir, he's in meetings for
14:22
the rest of the day. Then can I talk
14:24
to the hikers who found the badge? We can't
14:26
give out that information, I
14:29
can. I can try to talk
14:31
to Captain Haddock for you. If you leave me your number,
14:34
I'll follow up Okay, what's
14:36
your name? Officer Aboutista Sarah?
14:39
Alright, thank you all for spartiste. I know I'm
14:42
sounding alarmist, but this is strange.
14:46
Yeah, what's strange? Look
14:48
at this? Oh finish
14:51
love it? Yeah? Yeah, but it doesn't
14:53
look very ventured, does it. It's badge went missing
14:56
in with my father. Oh
14:58
yeah, this is the one they found in the woods. Thomas
15:00
Bradshaw always your dad. Yeah
15:03
yeah, except this doesn't look like
15:05
it was found in the woods. It looks four
15:08
years old, not forty. No
15:12
offense. But you sound like Becca who
15:15
and Becca retired
15:17
police officers. She comes in here every couple
15:19
of months with some new theory about your dad. I
15:22
guess she worked the case back in eighty
15:24
and final cracked in the head. The
15:26
stories. Some of the older guys around here
15:28
though about it sounds
15:30
like she was crazy from the start, Officer
15:33
McDermott, don't you have work to do? Right?
15:36
Sorry, I'm
15:38
sorry about him. He doesn't have the brain to mouth filter
15:40
the rest of us do sorright? Uh?
15:44
Well, can you tell me about Ann Becker? Jeremy,
15:49
I'm sorry, I don't understand
15:52
what you're saying. This badge
15:54
it looks like it was just in Dad's
15:57
pocket. It's like it's
15:59
like I'm holding this evities in my hand. It still
16:01
feels warm. I mean, I can practically
16:03
smell his aftershave on it. Well,
16:06
you still love dressing up in your dad's uniform.
16:08
It's a surprise. All of that is rushing
16:10
back. What if these hikers, what
16:13
if they were lying. What if they found something else
16:15
with the badge, something that was maybe
16:17
covering it or protecting it from the elements
16:20
or something. Why would they do that?
16:23
I don't know, but I'm telling you this badge
16:25
has not been out in the wilderness since I
16:29
don't know. Apparently there's
16:31
a retired police officer who
16:33
was on the original case and hasn't let
16:35
it go, And I'm gonna just go try and talk
16:37
to her tonight and see what she thinks. I
16:40
don't know why you want to dredge up such ancient history
16:43
because his murder never got solved.
16:46
I don't know. Maybe you're okay with that, but I'm not. I
16:48
thought you made peace with it, Jeremy. I
16:50
did too. I thought I did. I just
16:53
this, Mom. You
16:55
know, this is what I do when I don't understand something.
16:57
I learn everything I can about
16:59
it. That's why I became an academic. I
17:02
know, I know, you know. One
17:04
of the officers down at the station said that this retired
17:07
cop was a bit off her rocker.
17:09
But I still think it's it's worth seeing
17:12
for myself. What did you say
17:14
her name was? Again? Uh?
17:16
Anne Becker? Mom?
17:20
Do do you know her? Don't
17:22
talk to Anne Becker? Why
17:25
that woman doesn't know what she's talking about to
17:28
understand. She is unstable and
17:30
a liar. And I won't have you asking her
17:32
any questions. Okay, Mom,
17:34
what the hell are you talking about? You
17:36
listen to me, Jeremy. Don't go digging
17:38
up your father's grave in this way. Mom, I'm
17:41
not digging up my Please. Okay,
17:44
Honey, I have to go. Your
17:46
dad just put lunch on the table. My
17:48
stepdad. I wish you
17:50
could just move here, Jeremy, maybe if you
17:52
were close by. I
17:55
can't. Mom. You know that there's
17:57
nothing for you in Free Town. Jeremy, there's there
18:01
has been, Mom, I can't. I
18:03
can't just leave. Well, we
18:06
just come for a visit soon, right,
18:08
Some California sunshine might do you good.
18:11
Okay, Okay,
18:14
but I thank you for calling. It
18:16
was it was nice to hear your voice, Jeremy.
18:19
Yeah, you know you too. Oh
18:25
hey, sorry, I didn't think you'd still be in your office
18:28
this late. Should I come back? Oh
18:30
hey they've been No, no, you can come on in.
18:33
I pulled out those records that you asked for. Sorry,
18:36
what records? The UFO
18:38
ones history of sightings in North America?
18:40
Remember, yes, right, UFOs
18:43
not exactly my strong suit. Yeah,
18:46
you know, I'm kind of surprised you're actually teaching them the
18:48
semester, not to mention dedicating a whole
18:50
chapter of the book to them. Yeah, it's a
18:52
bit different from the usual religious and regional
18:54
stories. Actually took a quick skim
18:57
of all these and there's not a unifying origin
18:59
point any where. Yeah, well, I don't I
19:01
don't know. I guess UFO sightings have been in
19:03
the collective imagination for long
19:05
enough that I think the trend has become
19:08
culturally significant. I mean,
19:10
if you think about it, the lack of an origin point
19:12
can probably tell us just as much about
19:14
our society as a whole as
19:16
uh as you know, localized
19:19
folklore steeped in religious beliefs
19:21
can. Plus UFOs
19:23
have been sighted in the Bridgewater Triangle,
19:28
Will you go on and just say whatever it is you're gonna
19:30
say. No, I was you know, I wasn't.
19:32
I wasn't saying anything of it. Come on, just
19:34
spit it out, Okay,
19:37
the last lecture section today?
19:40
Yeah, what was did
19:43
you? I mean? Was he? Are
19:46
you okay?
19:50
Yeah? I'm okay. You know how
19:52
this place is the smallest town in the world. Well, everyone
19:54
knows everyone else's business, and
19:56
I just gotta roll with it. Yeah
20:00
it No, I get that.
20:02
But it was the first time someone knew
20:04
your business before you. Yeah,
20:07
I guess that was new. And
20:10
and what you left
20:12
the lecture hall pretty quickly after class.
20:15
Yeah, I went to get my father's
20:18
badge. That student who, uh
20:21
my god, what's his name? Mike? Mike?
20:24
Uh, Mike was right. Some
20:26
hikers found my dad's badge
20:29
in the woods. It's um, I don't know.
20:31
I guess it's actually nice to have a little
20:33
bit of him after all these years. I'm
20:36
I'm really sorry, professor. No,
20:39
really don't be. I'd lived my entire life
20:41
without my father at this point. Don't
20:43
even know what to miss. I don't
20:45
think that's how it works. Nothing.
20:49
Well, I'm glad you got some closure
20:51
or or momento. I don't
20:53
know. I guess you weren't really expecting
20:56
any answers. Huh, nope,
20:58
I'm not sure I'll ever have any answers. Who
21:19
are you? What do you want? Mrs
21:21
Becker? I won't
21:23
ask you again? Who are you? And what do you want? My
21:26
name is Jeremy Bradshaw. Oh
21:29
my god? So you
21:31
are have Have we
21:33
met a very
21:36
very long time ago? How old
21:38
are you now? Fifty? Actually?
21:41
But thanks? I
21:44
was never good with kids. They all look
21:46
the same to me. We met when I
21:48
was a kid. You don't remember,
21:50
Huh, I don't. I'm sorry,
21:54
trust me, I shouldn't be sorry.
21:56
Better off? Why
22:00
Okay, So, now that I know who you are, do you
22:02
want to come in and tell me what you want? Um?
22:06
Yeah, that does look like it's about to rain. Um.
22:12
You worked on my dad's case. I
22:15
was on the force at the time. Yeah. When
22:17
did you retire? Nearly
22:20
fifteen years ago. I did my
22:22
twenty years of service, a couple of years at the desk,
22:24
and then got out. It wasn't the friendliest
22:26
career for a woman, you know, especially in the eighties
22:28
and nineties and especially after. Yeah,
22:31
I can imagine, but you
22:34
still go back there every couple of months. Who
22:36
told you that I was down at
22:39
the station earlier today picking
22:41
up this h Where
22:47
did you get this? Some hikers
22:49
founded in the woods. Oh
22:52
and what else did they find? Nothing?
22:57
Mrs Beckers never
22:59
married. That it matters. I just
23:02
just call me Anne and are
23:04
you still looking into my father's case? That
23:06
case is closed? Yeah, but that's not
23:08
what I asked. What do you want from
23:10
me? I just want to know why
23:13
you've come back to the station recently. I just talked
23:16
to Officer Batista Maria.
23:19
She's a nice girl, smart, yeah,
23:22
she she told me that you've been trying to
23:24
get Captain Haddock to reopen the case. You
23:27
remember the Satana panic, don't you. Yeah?
23:29
Of course, Evangelical Christians
23:32
spreading fear about Satanic rituals throughout
23:34
America. It's an interesting conspiracy
23:36
phenomenon, actually, because well,
23:38
I would think the thing that would interest
23:40
you about it is the fact that it's
23:42
what they blamed your dad's disappearance on. Yeah,
23:46
but he was investigating a Satanic
23:49
cult, wasn't he that was active in the free Time
23:51
Forest. He wouldn't have been the first person
23:53
to get lost in there. And
23:55
it's completely plausible that the cult found
23:57
him and murdered him. But either
23:59
way, blame me and on the cult. It makes sense. There's
24:02
nothing about what happened to Thomas
24:04
that makes sense. You think
24:06
that you understand these words, but I
24:09
I have lived next to them for forty five
24:11
years. Strange things were happening back
24:13
then, and strange things are happening
24:15
again now, and all those fools down
24:18
at the station they won't
24:20
admit it. Okay,
24:23
I see what this is? What
24:27
what are you talking about? You know? I remember
24:29
all sorts of Kok's calling and coming to
24:31
our home and trying to convince my mother that her
24:33
husband was the victim of some sort of monster in
24:35
the forest. Right, I
24:39
gotta say I would have thought a police officer would be above
24:41
that sort of wild theorizing. But I guess I
24:43
was wrong. Uh huh. So they
24:45
told you that I was crazy, right,
24:48
didn't they? The police? They
24:51
said it back then too. When I didn't buy into
24:53
the panic, when I thought maybe there was more going
24:55
on, I was dismissed. Okay,
24:58
what more or do you think
25:00
what's going on? I mean, you
25:03
know that there's never been any substantiated
25:06
evidence of Satanic ritual abuse. Like
25:08
you said, it was the Christian fundamentalists.
25:12
American value has gone completely
25:14
haywire. Paranoia getting the best
25:16
of us. Paranoia got the best of the Freetown
25:18
police too. There was
25:21
evidence of cult activity in the woods,
25:23
yeah, hippie gatherings mostly. All
25:25
the actual animal mutilations came
25:28
later, though. That is
25:30
just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to what goes
25:32
on around here. Cool,
25:34
So what do you think happened? Packmuch got
25:36
him? Maybe a thunderbird came and took
25:39
him away. Well, I think there's a lot that
25:41
we don't know about, you know, monsters,
25:43
wormholes, witchcraft. This is a
25:45
strange place, this part
25:47
of the country. You know, just
25:50
before Thomas went missing, this area got a name for
25:52
itself. Yeah, the Bridgewater Triangle.
25:56
Yeah, I teach
25:58
folklore at the university. Now,
26:02
why would you want to go and do that after growing up
26:04
with all those cooks, turning your father's disappearance
26:06
into something so clearly wasn't okay?
26:10
I should go? Thank you. Wait,
26:14
don't forget this. You
26:17
might want to go to the lake. Take a look around.
26:19
I'm sure the police missed something. Wait
26:21
a second, how did you know that this was found at the lake, well
26:25
where else would have turned up. I'm
26:27
sorry, I don't I
26:30
told you strange
26:32
things are happening. Okay,
26:36
Can I just ask you what this? This
26:39
doesn't look like it's been in the woods for forty years, does
26:41
it? It sure doesn't.
26:44
No, okay, Uh, I gotta
26:46
go. Thanks Miss Becker,
26:49
and sorry, I will
26:53
just here. It's my home phone
26:55
number. I still use a landline. No self
26:57
service out here. Have
27:00
actually have the same tape machine since the seventies.
27:02
They don't make things like they used to. M
27:05
hmm, what's up? Oh?
27:07
Well nothing, I just the
27:09
message light. It wasn't on when
27:11
I got home, and the phone hasn't wrung all evening. So
27:14
maybe I finally gave up the ghost after forty years.
27:17
Maybe you need to
27:19
be careful, Bradshaw. Things aren't
27:21
what they seem right.
27:23
Well, I will get out of your hair. Call
27:26
me when you want to know more
27:28
you call? Well, sure, thanks,
27:35
Well it looks like you were right. It seems
27:37
like there is a storm on the way.
27:47
You have one unheard message?
27:50
Yeah, what all
27:57
right? And have more? Bridgewater
28:19
was created by Aaron Manky and written
28:21
and directed by Lauren Shippen, with
28:23
executive producers Aaron Manky,
28:25
Misha Collins, Matt Frederick and
28:28
Alex Williams. Supervising producer
28:30
Trevor Young, Editing and sound designed
28:33
by Trevor Young and Matt Stillo, and
28:35
music by Chad Lawson, Starring
28:38
Misha Collins as Jeremy Bradshaw,
28:40
Melissa Ponzio as Anne Becker,
28:42
Karen Sony as Vipen Corona, Laurie
28:45
Allen as Nancy Collins, Cheryl
28:47
Umania as Officer Bautista, Victoria
28:50
Grace as Katie, Frank's Will Wheaton
28:53
as Captain Haddock, Hillary Burton Morgan
28:55
as Shelley Hoskins, Jonathan
28:57
Joss as Joseph Hoskins, sob
29:00
Romy as Olivia Hoskins,
29:02
Samuel Marty as Ethan Hoskins,
29:04
Kristin Bauer as Celeste, and
29:06
Nathan Fillion as Thomas Bradshaw,
29:09
with additional voice acting by brigand
29:11
Snow, Andrew Nowak, Julia
29:14
Maurizawa, Jarvis Johnson
29:16
and Brielle Bresnan, Kristen de
29:18
Mecurio, James Oliva,
29:21
and Leron Amil. Learn
29:23
more about the show over at Grimm and Mild
29:26
dot com, slash Bridgewater, and find
29:28
more podcasts from I heart Radio, on
29:30
the I heart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
29:33
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,
29:35
and as always, thanks for listening.
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