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The First Degree

BONUS: KILLING TIME: PIGEONS

The First Degree

Alexis Linkletter and Jac Vanek

True Crime, Society & Culture, News

4.510K Ratings

🗓️ 23 March 2023

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week the girls and the ginger are on a quest to discover the true meaning behind some phrases we all use day-to-day. Should be a piece of cake. Piece of cake? There’s a story behind that. Then! On the stand this week: PortaPotties, Premature bag retrieval, Lisa Frank, and the word MOIST! And finally, a Worstie with one of the shittiest stories we’ve heard yet!

Transcript

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0:00.0

P in dance, sweet twist,

0:02.8

it is muchジuck

0:06.5

Rock music

0:10.4

Music

0:27.4

Welcome to Killing Time hosted by two girls, one ginger, we're back again, we're still wearing merch

0:33.4

Vintage merch. Your merch is a talk murder to me sweatshirt that we're not selling anymore, but

0:38.0

but it is a good one. It's old school. I feel a little weird wearing it because I don't wear pink. You look great. Thank you. It's a good color on it. I had a little matching pink shoes. I really like

0:48.8

ran and I really lean into it, but I was like, no one can see it. So it took off the shoes. Nobody can see our shoes. Yeah, it is better to be comfy. It is better to be comfy. I'm in pajamas like usual.

0:58.7

Jared's still not wearing any merch. It's kind of rude. Sorry. How are we feeling today? Feeling good in the neighborhood? Yeah. I'm on my second mango cart of the day. We got some champagne. We got some hint water.

1:10.8

Oh, this watermelon one. Delicious. Amazing. I know. It really has a hint of flavor. This is not an ad. Not an ad. Not an ad.

1:21.3

It's like this or this or that. I'm like, it really is a hint. Hint is good. It was a name for that. It really is a hint of the thing. Yeah, it's perfect. Sometimes I want as a hint. I don't want a lot of things. I don't want a whole melon. No, it's like how you do your

1:35.3

apparel spreads. Yes, with an apparel. This time it's just water. I know. Yeah. All right. Well, should we get into the day today? Yes, please. Okay, this was another one of those days. I know we've been starting to kind of do multiple days.

1:47.8

It's not really leaning super hard into one. Today we're leaning a little bit harder into one, but there are some other days that I want to talk about. I'm thrilled about the day today. Okay. It's a whole thing because you know. Yeah, I looked. Okay. I don't know. No, I'm also thrilled about it. I'm like, this is good because this is funny. I'm not going to like give you a spoiler alert, but it's something I'm always so fucking interested in. I'm wondering like with anything in life. I'm like, where did this begin? How did this start? I can't wait to see Jared. Well, please tell us. I don't know what this is. Okay. I'm going to get into what the main thing is.

2:17.8

I'm going to get into what the main thing is because we'll just talk about it. And then I'll get into the other days. So today is March 23rd. And a lot of things happen on March 23rd, but in March 23rd 1839 back in the day over 100 and you're, nope, over 200 years ago. Nope. 180 years ago. Yeah. 200 got you. Yeah.

2:37.8

Okay. Okay. Like the letters. Okay. Enteres national vernacular. Whoa. So on March 23rd 1839, the initials. Okay. Our first publish in the Boston Morning Post. So okay is the abbreviation for all correct. Did you know that?

2:54.8

All correct. Oh, LL KORR, ECT, which was a popular slang misspelling of all correct.

3:03.3

Whoa. All correct. Wow. So that's how we got into it. Is it the mistake comes from the old time in pronunciation?

3:09.8

Oh, correct. I get. I mean, I don't know, but it's how this happened. And I thought was really, really interesting.

3:15.8

As a during the late 1830s, it was a favorite practice among younger educated circles to misspell words intentionally and then abbreviate them and use a slang when talking to one another.

3:26.0

Is it like, I'm going to other all the people who are poor by creating your own language. That's basically what they're doing. Yeah. And they're, yeah.

3:35.0

So they're taking these, these kind of idiot, not idioms, but these phrases and then fucking them up and then abbreviate them. So they're really speaking some sort of like a pig Latin.

3:44.8

But not everybody's in on it, right? It's like when I get on TikTok and I'm like, what are these people saying?

...

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