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Rotten Mango

“Horse Wife” Hires Hitman To Kill Rich Husband After Burning $20M On Failed Horse Show Business

Rotten Mango

Stephanie Soo

Comedy, True Crime, Society & Culture

4.828K Ratings

🗓️ 25 January 2026

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The owners of the horse show, Valitar, are a wealthy, conventionally attractive couple called the Remley’s. Mark Remley is a little bit older. Perhaps nerdy, but the type of guy to get into peak shape later in life. Tatyana Remley is his wife with bottle blonde hair and a Sports Illustrated swimsuit model body. She’s also the main star of the Valitar horse show. The Remley’s invested over $20 million dollars into the show, just to lose every single penny of it after multiple scandals back to back. Allegedly, horses were abandoned with nothing to eat and massive creative differences led to performers quitting. Former staff members would come out to allege that Tatyana Remley doesn’t even know how to ride a horse that well… Later, the couple is featured on TV as a well known swinger’s couple, a pillar in the local sex-swinging community. That’s just a side quest though; the most scandalous thing that happened at Valitar was the decapitated horse head on the Remley’s marital bed. Thankfully, it’s not an actual butchered horse head. It’s just a hunk from one of their very expensive statues in their $5.5 million dollar home near San Diego, California. And it’s clearly not been placed there as a mistake. This is a targeted threat. And by the end of the investigation, one of the Remleys, the founders of the failed multi-million dollar Valitar horse show, will be dead. Full show notes available at RottenMangoPodcast.com

Transcript

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0:00.0

Bada being, baddaboo.

0:03.0

During the Olympics, if you ever watch the equestrian games, you're looking at a lot of science

0:08.8

inside the horse.

0:10.2

The horses are the science.

0:11.6

They are fine-tuned like cars.

0:14.9

I mean, they're basically Formula One cars, but alive and breathing and that's, you know,

0:19.5

horsepower.

0:20.4

They are genetically tested.

0:23.1

They're bred to make sure that they are well bred,

0:26.2

that they're well fit for the games that they're entering.

0:28.8

One lab testing that you can get done on a horse is for the speed gene.

0:32.6

It's a very specific gene.

0:33.6

If a horse has this specific gene,

0:36.6

they are going to be more predisposed to develop what they

0:40.3

call the fast twitch muscles. They're perfect for the sprint. But they're not going to be

0:44.9

endurance horses. So the genes of a horse can even tell you if a horse is going to be predisposed to

0:50.6

liking dirt or turf, which is very important. The lab says, some clients will even

0:56.2

have their horses tested as soon as they're born. Then they can just map out a plan for all of their

1:01.5

individual horses, which trainer they're going to go see, which type of sport they're going to specialize

1:06.0

in. And there's a lot of specialties. There's a lot of different ways you can look at a horse. I mean,

1:11.2

obviously, I'm not just talking from like an optimology standpoint. Let's start with English writing.

1:16.4

You have dressage, often called horse ballet. It's how a writer is able to guide their horse

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