1 00:00:04,400 --> 00:00:06,920 Speaker 1: Hey there, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh, 2 00:00:06,960 --> 00:00:09,840 Speaker 1: and there's Chuck, and there's Jerry enof talking. Let's get started. 3 00:00:11,760 --> 00:00:16,280 Speaker 1: Let's uh, let's travel, my friend, to not only Louisiana, 4 00:00:17,760 --> 00:00:22,400 Speaker 1: Louisiana and nineteen eighty. Can you imagine, which I believe 5 00:00:22,480 --> 00:00:25,840 Speaker 1: the drinking age back then was still probably eighteen I 6 00:00:25,880 --> 00:00:28,240 Speaker 1: think so too. I wasn't they held out the longest, 7 00:00:28,320 --> 00:00:30,360 Speaker 1: and they think they did. And the FEDS were like, 8 00:00:30,400 --> 00:00:33,920 Speaker 1: well kiss kiss decent roads, goodbye until you've been to 9 00:00:33,960 --> 00:00:39,400 Speaker 1: our will states rights. Oh goodness, who knew that was 10 00:00:39,400 --> 00:00:44,720 Speaker 1: going to come up? Me? So in in uh Louisiana, 11 00:00:45,080 --> 00:00:49,599 Speaker 1: in Iberia Parish, around the town of New Iberia, there 12 00:00:49,680 --> 00:00:52,600 Speaker 1: is a Lake Chuck. And it's still there today, which 13 00:00:52,760 --> 00:00:56,560 Speaker 1: is not that surprising. It will become surprising that it's 14 00:00:56,600 --> 00:01:01,080 Speaker 1: still there shortly. It's called Lake Panier p E I 15 00:01:01,240 --> 00:01:06,679 Speaker 1: G N E U are Lake Pennier, Okay. And in 16 00:01:06,760 --> 00:01:09,600 Speaker 1: November of nineteen eighty, which is where we are right now, 17 00:01:10,120 --> 00:01:14,760 Speaker 1: there was like some Texico contractors who were doing some 18 00:01:14,800 --> 00:01:19,440 Speaker 1: exploratory drilling in Lake Panier. And Lake Pennier was really 19 00:01:19,480 --> 00:01:23,960 Speaker 1: really big, um how many acres acres? I mean at 20 00:01:24,040 --> 00:01:30,760 Speaker 1: least like five or six acre rcres of land, but 21 00:01:31,880 --> 00:01:34,880 Speaker 1: only eleven ft deep. Yeah, that was like, I think 22 00:01:34,920 --> 00:01:37,120 Speaker 1: one of the deepest points. I think the average was 23 00:01:37,200 --> 00:01:40,600 Speaker 1: just a handful of feet, so really really wide, but 24 00:01:40,760 --> 00:01:47,480 Speaker 1: really really shallow. And the other right, the other um 25 00:01:47,600 --> 00:01:50,840 Speaker 1: point about that is that Lake Pannier set on top 26 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:53,520 Speaker 1: of what's called the salt dome. It's an accumulation of 27 00:01:53,560 --> 00:01:56,920 Speaker 1: salt that builds up underneath the ground. And there was 28 00:01:56,960 --> 00:02:01,960 Speaker 1: a company called the Diamond Crystal Salt Company and they 29 00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:04,600 Speaker 1: like to mind for salt around Lake Pin. Your and 30 00:02:04,640 --> 00:02:06,920 Speaker 1: all this is going on at the same day, at 31 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:09,399 Speaker 1: the same time, on the same day in November that 32 00:02:09,520 --> 00:02:13,560 Speaker 1: the Texico Exploratory crew was drilling down through Lake Pin. 33 00:02:13,639 --> 00:02:16,720 Speaker 1: You're looking for gas deposits, that's right, And I think 34 00:02:16,720 --> 00:02:19,919 Speaker 1: you see where this might be headed. But the details 35 00:02:19,960 --> 00:02:23,440 Speaker 1: of this story are so bonkers. It's so nuts, it's 36 00:02:23,480 --> 00:02:27,880 Speaker 1: just crazy. So Texicos is drilling and they're probing the 37 00:02:27,919 --> 00:02:30,760 Speaker 1: floor and their drill all of a sudden just seizes 38 00:02:30,840 --> 00:02:34,520 Speaker 1: up and stops about twelve hundred or so feet below 39 00:02:34,560 --> 00:02:37,160 Speaker 1: the surface. So if you remember, this lake is only 40 00:02:37,160 --> 00:02:40,440 Speaker 1: eleven ft deep, so they are far far far, far 41 00:02:40,480 --> 00:02:43,040 Speaker 1: far below this lake, and they said, that's that's interesting. 42 00:02:43,080 --> 00:02:46,240 Speaker 1: This doesn't usually happen. Yeah, so what what happens when 43 00:02:46,240 --> 00:02:48,079 Speaker 1: your drill gets stuck in something? You try and work 44 00:02:48,080 --> 00:02:50,800 Speaker 1: it loose a little bit um, which if it shallow, 45 00:02:50,800 --> 00:02:52,600 Speaker 1: it's no big deal. When it's that deep, it's a 46 00:02:52,600 --> 00:02:54,880 Speaker 1: little bit different because you can't see what's going on. 47 00:02:55,560 --> 00:02:58,280 Speaker 1: And all of a sudden, these workers heard, you know, 48 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:04,079 Speaker 1: pop boy awing, and this big rig all of a 49 00:03:04,120 --> 00:03:08,000 Speaker 1: sudden starts tilting toward the water, and they're like, mmmmm, 50 00:03:08,240 --> 00:03:11,000 Speaker 1: this is not good, guys. No, rigs are not supposed 51 00:03:11,040 --> 00:03:13,520 Speaker 1: to tilt. No, no, no, And this thing, uh, it's 52 00:03:13,520 --> 00:03:16,480 Speaker 1: a five million dollar drill, and it starts to sink, 53 00:03:16,840 --> 00:03:19,680 Speaker 1: and it starts to buck and it starts to move, 54 00:03:20,240 --> 00:03:22,120 Speaker 1: and all these dudes are like, all right, this is 55 00:03:22,160 --> 00:03:25,640 Speaker 1: not good at all. So we're gonna release ourself, uh, 56 00:03:26,120 --> 00:03:29,480 Speaker 1: release these barges that are attached. We're gonna get out 57 00:03:29,480 --> 00:03:34,119 Speaker 1: of here, and we're gonna get on shore, which they did, right, 58 00:03:34,160 --> 00:03:37,080 Speaker 1: So they got out of there. They made it safely. 59 00:03:37,560 --> 00:03:39,920 Speaker 1: But as they're on shore, like trying to figure out 60 00:03:39,920 --> 00:03:42,520 Speaker 1: what was going on, this is really weird. They're leaning 61 00:03:43,000 --> 00:03:46,880 Speaker 1: rig starts to kind of tip further and further into 62 00:03:46,880 --> 00:03:50,640 Speaker 1: the water, and surely at some point, if it's just 63 00:03:50,720 --> 00:03:53,720 Speaker 1: a few feet of water, should stop and stay above 64 00:03:53,760 --> 00:03:56,440 Speaker 1: the water. But these guys were really surprised when they 65 00:03:56,480 --> 00:03:59,280 Speaker 1: saw that the rig kept going underwater and underwater, and 66 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:03,160 Speaker 1: then it just this ap peered from sight. Could you imagine? No, 67 00:04:03,280 --> 00:04:06,000 Speaker 1: I can't. But as they're sitting there scratching their heads 68 00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:09,480 Speaker 1: over this one um, they noticed that a there was 69 00:04:09,520 --> 00:04:13,280 Speaker 1: a whirlpool that was starting to form, just a little 70 00:04:13,280 --> 00:04:17,120 Speaker 1: bit at first around the point where the oil the 71 00:04:17,720 --> 00:04:21,200 Speaker 1: drill rig had just disappeared. And then it started to 72 00:04:21,240 --> 00:04:26,039 Speaker 1: come into view I guess in their mind's eye what 73 00:04:26,160 --> 00:04:30,680 Speaker 1: had just happened. And they realized pretty quickly that they 74 00:04:30,680 --> 00:04:33,880 Speaker 1: had accidentally drilled all the way down into one of 75 00:04:33,920 --> 00:04:39,000 Speaker 1: the main shafts of the salt mines, twelve feet below 76 00:04:39,120 --> 00:04:43,479 Speaker 1: Lake Penner. And now there was a hole connecting the 77 00:04:43,560 --> 00:04:47,680 Speaker 1: air above the lake and the hole underneath the lake, 78 00:04:48,040 --> 00:04:50,320 Speaker 1: with a lot of water in between just waiting to 79 00:04:50,360 --> 00:04:53,360 Speaker 1: get in. YEA, so this whirlpool is growing and growing. 80 00:04:53,880 --> 00:04:56,560 Speaker 1: It eventually grows in front of their eyeballs to a 81 00:04:56,640 --> 00:04:59,680 Speaker 1: quarter of a mile in diameter. That is so enormous. 82 00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:02,560 Speaker 1: It's so enormous. Uh. In the meantime, down in the 83 00:05:02,600 --> 00:05:07,240 Speaker 1: salt mine, Uh, there's an electrician named Juniors Gattison. He 84 00:05:07,240 --> 00:05:11,560 Speaker 1: heard bang pop boying and it's like, that doesn't sound good. 85 00:05:12,200 --> 00:05:16,040 Speaker 1: And all of a sudden, muddy water starts rushing in 86 00:05:16,640 --> 00:05:19,240 Speaker 1: and it's bringing fuel drums along the mine shaft and 87 00:05:19,240 --> 00:05:21,760 Speaker 1: he was like, this is not good. He calls in 88 00:05:21,800 --> 00:05:24,800 Speaker 1: an alarm, which is three blinks of the light. He 89 00:05:24,800 --> 00:05:27,400 Speaker 1: heads out. All the workers are like, all right, we 90 00:05:27,440 --> 00:05:29,279 Speaker 1: know what three blinks of a light means. That means 91 00:05:29,279 --> 00:05:31,640 Speaker 1: we need to drop everything and get out of here. 92 00:05:32,040 --> 00:05:35,680 Speaker 1: And these fifty or so dudes are fifteen feet underground. 93 00:05:35,760 --> 00:05:39,200 Speaker 1: I'm sorry, fifteen hundred feet underground. Fifteen ft would be 94 00:05:39,240 --> 00:05:43,320 Speaker 1: no big deal. And they start getting up to higher 95 00:05:43,360 --> 00:05:45,080 Speaker 1: levels and higher levels where they can get to these 96 00:05:45,120 --> 00:05:47,039 Speaker 1: elevators to get them out. They get to the third 97 00:05:47,160 --> 00:05:52,320 Speaker 1: level and it's blocked by these rising waters on the surface. 98 00:05:54,480 --> 00:05:58,800 Speaker 1: It's like, uh, something out of the Bible or an 99 00:05:58,920 --> 00:06:02,440 Speaker 1: X Files episode or something. What was originally a fourteen 100 00:06:02,560 --> 00:06:07,760 Speaker 1: inch hole in the ground in this mine starts to 101 00:06:07,800 --> 00:06:09,760 Speaker 1: fill up with water and all of a sudden water 102 00:06:09,839 --> 00:06:13,720 Speaker 1: hits salt, and that starts dissolving and dissolving. All these 103 00:06:13,720 --> 00:06:18,360 Speaker 1: columns of salt supporting these caves and tunnels start dissolving, 104 00:06:18,920 --> 00:06:21,320 Speaker 1: and this whole mine starts collapsing in front of everyone's 105 00:06:21,320 --> 00:06:24,640 Speaker 1: face and chuck all that water that's flowing through, dissolving 106 00:06:24,640 --> 00:06:26,760 Speaker 1: away the salt. That was like three and a half 107 00:06:26,839 --> 00:06:30,240 Speaker 1: billion gallons of water. So it's a substantial amount of 108 00:06:30,240 --> 00:06:33,520 Speaker 1: water starting to fill up that salt mine underneath. And 109 00:06:33,880 --> 00:06:36,720 Speaker 1: as the water is sinking down from the lake, it's 110 00:06:36,760 --> 00:06:39,800 Speaker 1: starting to flood upward towards the bottom of the lake, 111 00:06:40,120 --> 00:06:43,479 Speaker 1: which doesn't happen very often in Louisiana anywhere else really. 112 00:06:43,680 --> 00:06:45,880 Speaker 1: All Right, I think we should take a break. We'll 113 00:06:45,920 --> 00:07:08,799 Speaker 1: come back and finish this amazing story right after this. 114 00:07:08,800 --> 00:07:11,440 Speaker 1: This is an amazing story. I love this story. It's 115 00:07:11,480 --> 00:07:14,200 Speaker 1: one of my all time favorites. All Right. So below 116 00:07:14,200 --> 00:07:17,000 Speaker 1: the surface, um, they're these miners trying to get out. 117 00:07:17,720 --> 00:07:19,640 Speaker 1: They finally get up to level three where they can 118 00:07:19,680 --> 00:07:23,360 Speaker 1: access these elevators, but there's a ton of high water 119 00:07:23,440 --> 00:07:28,160 Speaker 1: blocking their route. They're using mine carts and and vehicles 120 00:07:28,200 --> 00:07:30,360 Speaker 1: powered by diesel to try and push their way through 121 00:07:30,880 --> 00:07:35,000 Speaker 1: and eventually all those fifty miners, uh, eight dudes at 122 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:37,800 Speaker 1: a time are able to get into these elevators that 123 00:07:37,880 --> 00:07:41,440 Speaker 1: carry them to the surface. Uh. And it's not like 124 00:07:41,440 --> 00:07:44,480 Speaker 1: the speedy elevator. Imagine the waiting as this water is 125 00:07:44,640 --> 00:07:48,080 Speaker 1: rising for the elevator to come back was some seriously 126 00:07:48,120 --> 00:07:51,040 Speaker 1: scary stuff. Yeah, I mean eight at a time, there's 127 00:07:51,080 --> 00:07:53,680 Speaker 1: fifty of them down there, and the elevator slow as Christmas. 128 00:07:53,760 --> 00:07:56,640 Speaker 1: I can't imagine how stressful that must have been. And like, 129 00:07:57,200 --> 00:07:59,240 Speaker 1: how did you decide who went? You know, I mean 130 00:07:59,280 --> 00:08:03,320 Speaker 1: that's scary stuff. So as the miners are like starting 131 00:08:03,360 --> 00:08:06,880 Speaker 1: to like slowly come up like eight by eight um 132 00:08:06,920 --> 00:08:09,760 Speaker 1: above ground back up on the surface of the lake, 133 00:08:10,240 --> 00:08:13,440 Speaker 1: there's like this this this huge hole has opened up 134 00:08:13,480 --> 00:08:16,720 Speaker 1: where the whirlpool was, and the section from the whirlpool 135 00:08:17,240 --> 00:08:21,400 Speaker 1: has sucked the Gulf of Mexico in now. So like 136 00:08:21,440 --> 00:08:23,600 Speaker 1: there was three and a half billion gallons of Lake 137 00:08:23,640 --> 00:08:27,280 Speaker 1: Panier to begin with, but that whirlpool that created sucked 138 00:08:27,360 --> 00:08:30,800 Speaker 1: the water from Del Cambrie Canal that connects the Gulf 139 00:08:30,800 --> 00:08:33,640 Speaker 1: of Mexico and Lake Panire suck the Gulf of Mexico 140 00:08:33,679 --> 00:08:38,160 Speaker 1: into the lake and eleven barges that happened to be 141 00:08:38,280 --> 00:08:42,280 Speaker 1: in this miles long canal. Um got sucked into Lake Panier, 142 00:08:42,559 --> 00:08:45,120 Speaker 1: and that just sucked into Lake Panir, sucked down the 143 00:08:45,120 --> 00:08:51,080 Speaker 1: whirlpool into the salt mines underground. Yeah, so uh, eleven 144 00:08:51,080 --> 00:08:56,320 Speaker 1: barges gulp, Um, Jefferson Island seventy acres, big gulp, another 145 00:08:56,440 --> 00:09:01,680 Speaker 1: drilling platform, gulp. This little tugboats out there. God blessed 146 00:09:01,720 --> 00:09:04,600 Speaker 1: this little tug boat just doing everything it can to 147 00:09:04,640 --> 00:09:07,400 Speaker 1: get out of there and fight that current full power 148 00:09:07,960 --> 00:09:10,720 Speaker 1: to get basically sucked down what looks like a toilet. 149 00:09:10,800 --> 00:09:13,640 Speaker 1: Probably these dudes are like, I don't think we're gonna 150 00:09:13,640 --> 00:09:15,560 Speaker 1: make it. So they managed to get this thing over 151 00:09:15,600 --> 00:09:19,200 Speaker 1: close enough to the bank to jump off and then 152 00:09:19,360 --> 00:09:22,960 Speaker 1: by by tugboat gulp. Yeah, imagine that. Like just seeing 153 00:09:22,960 --> 00:09:25,400 Speaker 1: the tug boat, like, you're a tug boat is pretty 154 00:09:25,440 --> 00:09:27,760 Speaker 1: strong man, and the idea of it not being able 155 00:09:27,800 --> 00:09:30,680 Speaker 1: to fight this current, that just tells you how strong 156 00:09:30,760 --> 00:09:33,719 Speaker 1: that whirlpool was. So there goes the tugboat, There goes 157 00:09:33,760 --> 00:09:37,440 Speaker 1: eleven barges, oil, Derek, a lot of um, Jefferson Island 158 00:09:37,840 --> 00:09:42,640 Speaker 1: and um. Finally, after oh one, there was one other thing. 159 00:09:42,720 --> 00:09:45,040 Speaker 1: So this made the whole thing even more biblical, Chuck. 160 00:09:45,400 --> 00:09:47,160 Speaker 1: There was a lot of air down there in these 161 00:09:47,240 --> 00:09:50,480 Speaker 1: underground mine shafts, and as the water filled up the 162 00:09:50,520 --> 00:09:53,840 Speaker 1: mine shafts and displaced the air, that air came shooting 163 00:09:53,920 --> 00:09:57,199 Speaker 1: pressurized up to the surface. And so every once in 164 00:09:57,200 --> 00:09:59,960 Speaker 1: a while, like a geyser would shoot off like four 165 00:10:00,080 --> 00:10:02,560 Speaker 1: hundred feet into the air right out of Lake Panier. 166 00:10:04,040 --> 00:10:06,640 Speaker 1: All right, is that your fact of the show. That's 167 00:10:06,640 --> 00:10:08,959 Speaker 1: one of them. I think this whole thing is one 168 00:10:09,000 --> 00:10:12,720 Speaker 1: big factor of the show, because here's mine. Okay, So 169 00:10:13,320 --> 00:10:16,600 Speaker 1: what happens when you suck stuff down there and then 170 00:10:16,720 --> 00:10:19,200 Speaker 1: eventually that thing's gonna fill up. It's not just gonna 171 00:10:19,400 --> 00:10:21,600 Speaker 1: fill up the entire center of the earth with water. 172 00:10:22,280 --> 00:10:24,360 Speaker 1: Eventually the salt mine's gonna fill up, and it's gonna 173 00:10:24,400 --> 00:10:28,280 Speaker 1: sort of regulate and equalize. That eventually happens. Three point 174 00:10:28,320 --> 00:10:32,840 Speaker 1: five billion collons of water drain in three hours, and 175 00:10:32,880 --> 00:10:35,120 Speaker 1: then over the next couple of days, that lake level 176 00:10:35,160 --> 00:10:40,560 Speaker 1: eventually reaches that original waterline, and then over and over, 177 00:10:41,160 --> 00:10:44,520 Speaker 1: nine of these barges come popping back up like a 178 00:10:44,880 --> 00:10:48,679 Speaker 1: cork that you've been holding underwater. Just boom, boom, boom. 179 00:10:48,720 --> 00:10:51,120 Speaker 1: All these things just keep popping back up. It must 180 00:10:51,120 --> 00:10:53,520 Speaker 1: have been amazing to see that, to see a bar 181 00:10:53,760 --> 00:10:56,160 Speaker 1: just come popping up out of the water. No tug 182 00:10:56,200 --> 00:10:59,320 Speaker 1: boat though, No, no tug boat. And I think two 183 00:10:59,360 --> 00:11:01,640 Speaker 1: of the bars is they're still trapped down there along 184 00:11:01,679 --> 00:11:05,560 Speaker 1: with the tug boat and those the collapsed salt mines somewhere. Yeah. 185 00:11:05,600 --> 00:11:08,559 Speaker 1: I guess they're just wedged in there. Huh. Yep. So, 186 00:11:08,640 --> 00:11:11,960 Speaker 1: the the fact that the that Lake pin Your sucked 187 00:11:12,320 --> 00:11:15,880 Speaker 1: the Gulf of Mexico into the Lake Um, the fact 188 00:11:15,920 --> 00:11:19,640 Speaker 1: that the salt mines collapsed Um. Lake pin Your was 189 00:11:19,840 --> 00:11:23,320 Speaker 1: completely changed by this. Here's what Here's here's the actual 190 00:11:23,360 --> 00:11:26,199 Speaker 1: fact of the podcast. Not one person lost their life 191 00:11:26,280 --> 00:11:29,680 Speaker 1: or was seriously injured. That the fifty miners made it out, 192 00:11:29,920 --> 00:11:32,600 Speaker 1: the guys from the tug boat, from the oil um 193 00:11:32,800 --> 00:11:37,559 Speaker 1: drill rig, everybody made it out. Nobody was on Jefferson 194 00:11:37,600 --> 00:11:40,520 Speaker 1: Island that got sucked into the whirlpool. Not one person 195 00:11:40,600 --> 00:11:44,600 Speaker 1: died from this most colossal disaster, which is astounding. But 196 00:11:44,679 --> 00:11:47,560 Speaker 1: the lake itself was changed too. It went from being 197 00:11:47,559 --> 00:11:52,280 Speaker 1: a freshwater lake to a saltwater lake, and one that 198 00:11:52,360 --> 00:11:54,439 Speaker 1: was you know, a handful of feet deep to about 199 00:11:54,480 --> 00:11:58,840 Speaker 1: two feet deep. Now, yeah, it was initially like really 200 00:11:58,880 --> 00:12:02,440 Speaker 1: really deep, but that of aventually spread out in Uh. 201 00:12:02,480 --> 00:12:04,560 Speaker 1: I guess they settled on two feet as a good 202 00:12:04,600 --> 00:12:08,440 Speaker 1: new depth, right. Um. They had to pay out. Texico 203 00:12:08,440 --> 00:12:10,160 Speaker 1: of course had to pay out, you know, many millions 204 00:12:10,160 --> 00:12:13,720 Speaker 1: of dollars to the Assault mine company and other various 205 00:12:13,800 --> 00:12:17,160 Speaker 1: companies that are around there that got destroyed all these houses. 206 00:12:17,200 --> 00:12:20,840 Speaker 1: Of course, you know, the lake really really grew, um, 207 00:12:20,920 --> 00:12:25,000 Speaker 1: not only in depth but in size. So today it's 208 00:12:25,040 --> 00:12:27,520 Speaker 1: you know, basically sort of like a brackish saline lake. 209 00:12:28,400 --> 00:12:31,079 Speaker 1: Um you can see like closer to the shoreline, like 210 00:12:31,160 --> 00:12:35,360 Speaker 1: chimneys of houses that still pop above the surface. Yeah, 211 00:12:35,400 --> 00:12:38,520 Speaker 1: it's really an amazing story. And all of this happened 212 00:12:38,600 --> 00:12:44,560 Speaker 1: because the Texico engineer mistook one kind of map coordinates 213 00:12:44,600 --> 00:12:47,240 Speaker 1: for another and miscalculated where the salt mine was when 214 00:12:47,280 --> 00:12:49,640 Speaker 1: they were drilling. I'm surprised to hear that an oil 215 00:12:49,640 --> 00:12:55,120 Speaker 1: company was responsible for an ecological disaster, right, nice one, Chuck, Well, 216 00:12:55,120 --> 00:12:59,079 Speaker 1: that's the short stuff. Hat tipped to our pals Alan Bellows. 217 00:12:59,080 --> 00:13:02,640 Speaker 1: That damn interesting, and our frank Ken Jennings for uh 218 00:13:02,760 --> 00:13:06,240 Speaker 1: doing writing some good articles on this stuff. Uh and 219 00:13:06,520 --> 00:13:12,640 Speaker 1: uh I guess that's it, so short. Stuff Away. Stuff 220 00:13:12,679 --> 00:13:14,720 Speaker 1: you Should Know is a production of iHeart Radios How 221 00:13:14,760 --> 00:13:17,720 Speaker 1: Stuff Works. For more podcasts for my heart Radio, visit 222 00:13:17,720 --> 00:13:20,560 Speaker 1: the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen 223 00:13:20,600 --> 00:13:24,559 Speaker 1: to your favorite shows. H