1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:04,560 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,840 --> 00:00:08,280 Speaker 2: Lisa Townsend Rodgers was born in Poughkeepsie spent her formative 3 00:00:08,360 --> 00:00:11,440 Speaker 2: years in New York City before eventually moving to Las Vegas. 4 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:14,200 Speaker 2: She's worked as a journalist and editor for a vast 5 00:00:14,320 --> 00:00:16,840 Speaker 2: array of publications here in this town, as well as 6 00:00:16,880 --> 00:00:20,840 Speaker 2: a teacher and librarian. This book, just out Shameless Women 7 00:00:20,920 --> 00:00:23,000 Speaker 2: of the Underworld is just excellent. 8 00:00:23,120 --> 00:00:24,560 Speaker 3: Lisa, welcome to the program. 9 00:00:25,160 --> 00:00:27,240 Speaker 4: Ah, thank you for having me, and thank you for 10 00:00:27,240 --> 00:00:28,400 Speaker 4: saying so much nice things. 11 00:00:28,240 --> 00:00:28,840 Speaker 3: About my book. 12 00:00:29,040 --> 00:00:31,319 Speaker 2: Oh my gosh, I really enjoyed it. I tell me 13 00:00:31,360 --> 00:00:34,080 Speaker 2: this walk us through the inspiration. I mean, you've lived 14 00:00:34,120 --> 00:00:36,920 Speaker 2: in this town for a while, and our mob history 15 00:00:37,320 --> 00:00:40,440 Speaker 2: is well known, but it's mostly about guys Tony Spilatro, 16 00:00:40,520 --> 00:00:44,520 Speaker 2: Lefty Rosenthal, Ben Siegel, folks like that. Is that part 17 00:00:44,520 --> 00:00:48,080 Speaker 2: of the inspiration that you felt women, bad girl women 18 00:00:48,120 --> 00:00:50,199 Speaker 2: needed some representation. 19 00:00:49,600 --> 00:00:53,640 Speaker 4: Too, Yeah, I mean, and also being from New York, 20 00:00:53,720 --> 00:00:56,920 Speaker 4: that's another city that has its own history with the Mob. 21 00:00:57,640 --> 00:01:00,440 Speaker 4: And you know, I've always been interested in and you 22 00:01:00,480 --> 00:01:03,760 Speaker 4: know sort of the people who are whose names you 23 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:07,800 Speaker 4: see mentioned, but nobody really tells you their story, and 24 00:01:07,840 --> 00:01:10,800 Speaker 4: that's really sort of what these women were. You you know, 25 00:01:10,840 --> 00:01:14,800 Speaker 4: we've heard infinitely about Tony Spilatro Lefty, and you keep 26 00:01:14,840 --> 00:01:17,959 Speaker 4: hearing Jerry's name, and she's so important, But who was she? 27 00:01:18,040 --> 00:01:20,920 Speaker 4: What was her deal? You know, same thing with Virginia Hill, 28 00:01:21,120 --> 00:01:24,399 Speaker 4: you know, the flamingo. But who was she? You know, 29 00:01:24,480 --> 00:01:27,240 Speaker 4: you just hear her name all the time. So I 30 00:01:27,280 --> 00:01:30,280 Speaker 4: felt it was you know, that was sort of the inspiration, 31 00:01:30,520 --> 00:01:33,880 Speaker 4: was looking into them, digging into that more before we 32 00:01:33,959 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 4: jump into each of the individual characters, tell me a 33 00:01:36,680 --> 00:01:37,600 Speaker 4: bit about the research. 34 00:01:37,640 --> 00:01:41,160 Speaker 2: I mean, the footnotes make it clear that you did 35 00:01:41,200 --> 00:01:42,800 Speaker 2: a lot of reading and did a lot of digging 36 00:01:42,800 --> 00:01:43,320 Speaker 2: on your own. 37 00:01:43,520 --> 00:01:45,080 Speaker 3: How you compile all this stuff? 38 00:01:46,959 --> 00:01:49,320 Speaker 4: Well, I mean, in a way, you know, I've sort 39 00:01:49,360 --> 00:01:51,640 Speaker 4: of you know, you think if I think about when 40 00:01:51,640 --> 00:01:54,320 Speaker 4: I first started reading about Bonnie Parker, I mean, gosh, 41 00:01:54,360 --> 00:01:56,320 Speaker 4: I was probably a teenager. So in a way, you 42 00:01:56,320 --> 00:01:59,440 Speaker 4: could say researching this for most of my advice, but 43 00:02:00,600 --> 00:02:03,280 Speaker 4: you know, mostly I was there over the last ten years. 44 00:02:04,160 --> 00:02:06,720 Speaker 4: I was invited to do a book that was part 45 00:02:06,720 --> 00:02:10,480 Speaker 4: of the Las Vegas Book Festival, and I wrote a 46 00:02:10,560 --> 00:02:13,359 Speaker 4: chapter that was about Vegas in the seventies that was 47 00:02:13,400 --> 00:02:17,079 Speaker 4: about Elvis Hunter, S. Thompson and Jerry Rosenthal about how 48 00:02:17,680 --> 00:02:19,560 Speaker 4: Vegas kind of gives you what you want and then 49 00:02:19,600 --> 00:02:24,560 Speaker 4: takes everything away. And then I did a piece for 50 00:02:24,639 --> 00:02:28,840 Speaker 4: Desert Companion about Virginia Hill because you know who was 51 00:02:28,880 --> 00:02:30,960 Speaker 4: the Flamingo and it turns out it wasn't actually named 52 00:02:31,000 --> 00:02:35,040 Speaker 4: after her. And I started digging into those and then 53 00:02:35,840 --> 00:02:38,280 Speaker 4: you know, I started going, hey, well what about these 54 00:02:38,320 --> 00:02:43,440 Speaker 4: other women? And then my publisher, Anthony, who I knew, 55 00:02:44,760 --> 00:02:47,040 Speaker 4: heard me telling stories about these women because I just 56 00:02:47,080 --> 00:02:48,679 Speaker 4: looked into it and was like, you should write a 57 00:02:48,680 --> 00:02:52,160 Speaker 4: book and lo and behold, I did you know? So 58 00:02:52,200 --> 00:02:56,200 Speaker 4: it was just a lot of internet research. Unfortunately, during 59 00:02:56,440 --> 00:02:58,560 Speaker 4: during a pandemic, I couldn't really go in person to 60 00:02:58,639 --> 00:03:01,119 Speaker 4: a lot of collections. I did go to the Schomberg 61 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:05,200 Speaker 4: Center in New York obviously UNLV some places in LA 62 00:03:05,480 --> 00:03:09,160 Speaker 4: but you know, it was a lot of online libraries, 63 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:12,560 Speaker 4: digging up books, getting old magazines, stuff like that. 64 00:03:13,360 --> 00:03:15,440 Speaker 3: Is the mob Museum? Was that a resource for you? 65 00:03:15,800 --> 00:03:19,480 Speaker 2: Here in Las Vegas, we have the Museum of Organized 66 00:03:19,480 --> 00:03:20,519 Speaker 2: Crime and Law Enforcement. 67 00:03:20,600 --> 00:03:21,520 Speaker 3: It's terrific. 68 00:03:21,560 --> 00:03:23,480 Speaker 2: If you've ever been to Las Vegas and you haven't 69 00:03:23,520 --> 00:03:26,000 Speaker 2: seen it, you've missed out. But were they helpful? I 70 00:03:26,040 --> 00:03:28,880 Speaker 2: know Jeff Schumacher from the museum helped write a review. 71 00:03:29,960 --> 00:03:33,399 Speaker 4: Yeah, it's absolutely. You know, that's always been a resource, 72 00:03:33,760 --> 00:03:36,280 Speaker 4: you know, I think for anybody who researches the mob 73 00:03:36,320 --> 00:03:39,120 Speaker 4: in law enforcement and for this, you know, they were 74 00:03:39,240 --> 00:03:42,120 Speaker 4: definitely helpful. And they were people I could, you know, 75 00:03:42,160 --> 00:03:44,680 Speaker 4: when I had a question that arose that I couldn't 76 00:03:44,680 --> 00:03:47,000 Speaker 4: just kind of look up, I could kind of go 77 00:03:47,040 --> 00:03:49,000 Speaker 4: to them as a resource. You know, that was sort 78 00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:51,960 Speaker 4: of the value of those places, and you know that is, 79 00:03:52,160 --> 00:03:54,680 Speaker 4: as you said, definitely a fantastic place that people should 80 00:03:54,760 --> 00:03:56,320 Speaker 4: visit when they're in Las Vegas. 81 00:03:56,880 --> 00:03:59,400 Speaker 2: Let's start with a name that pretty much everyone on 82 00:03:59,440 --> 00:04:02,440 Speaker 2: our audience well know. I it's not the first chapter 83 00:04:02,440 --> 00:04:05,520 Speaker 2: in your book. It's Bonnie Parker, and you know Bodnie 84 00:04:05,520 --> 00:04:09,120 Speaker 2: and Clyde. My gosh, I thought I knew a lot 85 00:04:09,160 --> 00:04:13,120 Speaker 2: about her and about them, but this opened up a 86 00:04:13,160 --> 00:04:14,600 Speaker 2: whole new avenues. 87 00:04:14,200 --> 00:04:17,320 Speaker 3: For me as a reader, and it broke my heart. 88 00:04:17,440 --> 00:04:18,839 Speaker 3: This story broke my heart. 89 00:04:20,440 --> 00:04:23,279 Speaker 2: You know, it's been romanticized quite a bit, but gosh, 90 00:04:23,800 --> 00:04:26,760 Speaker 2: you focus on a lot on the time they spend 91 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:29,920 Speaker 2: on the run. It is grim and nasty and bad. 92 00:04:30,640 --> 00:04:32,640 Speaker 2: So tell me about learning about her. How much of 93 00:04:32,680 --> 00:04:33,640 Speaker 2: this was new to you? 94 00:04:34,600 --> 00:04:36,600 Speaker 4: I mean a lot of it was, you know, as 95 00:04:36,600 --> 00:04:39,200 Speaker 4: I mentioned, I'd always been interested. Maybe that was sort 96 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:41,359 Speaker 4: of the beginning of my interest in this topic, you know, 97 00:04:41,360 --> 00:04:44,920 Speaker 4: when as a kid. But you know, again you get 98 00:04:44,920 --> 00:04:48,520 Speaker 4: the romantic version, this very Hollywood vision of them, and 99 00:04:48,600 --> 00:04:52,600 Speaker 4: when you start digging into it, you know, unfortunately there 100 00:04:52,640 --> 00:04:56,039 Speaker 4: are a lot of accounts from family members. You can 101 00:04:56,520 --> 00:04:58,640 Speaker 4: you know, since they were so heavily covered, you can 102 00:04:58,680 --> 00:05:03,200 Speaker 4: find a lot of contemporary accounts. But as I dug 103 00:05:03,240 --> 00:05:06,599 Speaker 4: in further just finding out how again, it was just 104 00:05:06,680 --> 00:05:10,160 Speaker 4: they were so desperate, you know, they you know, Bonnie's 105 00:05:10,160 --> 00:05:13,240 Speaker 4: family been kind of middle class but lost everything. Clyde's 106 00:05:13,240 --> 00:05:15,400 Speaker 4: family you know, as I say in the book, the 107 00:05:15,560 --> 00:05:18,760 Speaker 4: Jodes would have pitied them like the Porks had never 108 00:05:18,800 --> 00:05:20,840 Speaker 4: really had a home, you was, just were passed around. 109 00:05:21,120 --> 00:05:24,000 Speaker 4: They lived under an aqueduct, you know. And then when 110 00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:26,320 Speaker 4: they were on the run, it wasn't this sort of 111 00:05:27,120 --> 00:05:31,640 Speaker 4: again glamorous vision of you know, funny cride, We rob banks. 112 00:05:31,680 --> 00:05:35,679 Speaker 4: You know, they knocked over grocery stores to get by, 113 00:05:35,720 --> 00:05:41,080 Speaker 4: basically camped out, you know, and one of the things 114 00:05:41,160 --> 00:05:43,479 Speaker 4: that you know isn't discussed enough I think is also 115 00:05:43,600 --> 00:05:46,080 Speaker 4: just you know, Bonnie was horribly wounded, like she could 116 00:05:46,080 --> 00:05:50,599 Speaker 4: barely walk by the time they died, so you know, 117 00:05:50,760 --> 00:05:53,080 Speaker 4: digging into that. And also that was the chapter that 118 00:05:53,160 --> 00:05:55,960 Speaker 4: took me the longest. For that reason was just having 119 00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:58,120 Speaker 4: to go through everything. Literally, I would say, there was 120 00:05:58,160 --> 00:06:01,160 Speaker 4: a timeline. It's almost you know, week by week. 121 00:06:02,200 --> 00:06:04,120 Speaker 2: Yeah, well you had to probably sort through a lot 122 00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:06,320 Speaker 2: of mythology and toss it aside too, things that have 123 00:06:06,320 --> 00:06:07,919 Speaker 2: been written about him that were not accurate. 124 00:06:08,000 --> 00:06:08,440 Speaker 3: I mean, the. 125 00:06:08,440 --> 00:06:12,400 Speaker 2: Public perceptions probably are way off base based on what 126 00:06:12,440 --> 00:06:15,320 Speaker 2: I just read from you. As you note, if not 127 00:06:15,440 --> 00:06:18,400 Speaker 2: for Bonnie of the Bonny and Clyde, Clyde might have 128 00:06:18,440 --> 00:06:21,400 Speaker 2: been forgotten. It's just some two bit punk who got 129 00:06:21,400 --> 00:06:22,880 Speaker 2: shot by police. 130 00:06:23,440 --> 00:06:26,159 Speaker 4: Oh absolutely. I don't even know how interested the police 131 00:06:26,160 --> 00:06:29,400 Speaker 4: would have really been. I mean, they would have gotten him. 132 00:06:29,520 --> 00:06:34,080 Speaker 4: But you know, the media coverage was always about her, 133 00:06:34,160 --> 00:06:36,080 Speaker 4: and again it was just the idea that there was 134 00:06:36,120 --> 00:06:39,760 Speaker 4: a woman involved, which you know is still surprising to people, 135 00:06:39,760 --> 00:06:45,039 Speaker 4: but back then was what And also, as I mentioned, 136 00:06:45,760 --> 00:06:48,320 Speaker 4: you know she was and this is again one of 137 00:06:48,360 --> 00:06:51,839 Speaker 4: the things I discovered from research like an incredibly bright woman, 138 00:06:52,520 --> 00:06:54,760 Speaker 4: you know. I mean, she wrote those poems which are 139 00:06:54,800 --> 00:06:57,039 Speaker 4: sort of you know, people sort of oh, they're sort 140 00:06:57,080 --> 00:07:00,400 Speaker 4: of dogg roll in a way, but they're well done. 141 00:07:00,480 --> 00:07:04,479 Speaker 4: She staged most of those photos, you know, she was 142 00:07:04,640 --> 00:07:07,039 Speaker 4: very good with media and image, and at time when 143 00:07:07,080 --> 00:07:10,080 Speaker 4: people didn't understand that, and I'm sure even she didn't 144 00:07:10,080 --> 00:07:13,120 Speaker 4: really understand what she was doing, but at a certain 145 00:07:13,120 --> 00:07:17,480 Speaker 4: point she recognized that they were going to be spoken about, 146 00:07:17,520 --> 00:07:20,280 Speaker 4: and she wanted to say in that. One thing that 147 00:07:20,360 --> 00:07:23,000 Speaker 4: was interesting is, you know, out in prim they have 148 00:07:23,160 --> 00:07:26,800 Speaker 4: the Bonnie and Clyde dusk car right, which is unfortunately 149 00:07:26,840 --> 00:07:28,840 Speaker 4: now like literally in the middle of the casino floor 150 00:07:29,000 --> 00:07:30,440 Speaker 4: used to be a little bit off so you can 151 00:07:30,520 --> 00:07:33,800 Speaker 4: sort of focus on it more, but now it's just 152 00:07:33,840 --> 00:07:37,440 Speaker 4: sort of literally ringed with slot machines. But when you 153 00:07:37,480 --> 00:07:40,200 Speaker 4: look at things like the newspaper clippings they literally have 154 00:07:40,400 --> 00:07:44,440 Speaker 4: up there, they talk about how they aren't that final 155 00:07:44,560 --> 00:07:47,760 Speaker 4: poem that she wrote. The newspapers already had it when 156 00:07:47,760 --> 00:07:51,600 Speaker 4: they died, or somebody had it to give to them, 157 00:07:52,080 --> 00:07:54,360 Speaker 4: you know, And literally she had said, don't hand this 158 00:07:54,440 --> 00:07:56,680 Speaker 4: off until after we passed, because I want to make 159 00:07:56,720 --> 00:07:58,280 Speaker 4: sure I get our final word. 160 00:07:58,080 --> 00:08:02,800 Speaker 2: In U share with us as you describe her. I mean, 161 00:08:03,160 --> 00:08:07,000 Speaker 2: she was bright, and she was smart. She could have 162 00:08:07,040 --> 00:08:10,840 Speaker 2: gone places, she had high hopes. She was personal in 163 00:08:10,920 --> 00:08:13,840 Speaker 2: that she would win people over it, converse them. She 164 00:08:13,920 --> 00:08:16,840 Speaker 2: was interested in other people. And how does she go wrong? 165 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:19,480 Speaker 2: Where does that go wrong? Just her family was in poverty. 166 00:08:19,520 --> 00:08:21,720 Speaker 2: But tell the story of how she hooks up with Clyde. 167 00:08:23,480 --> 00:08:25,280 Speaker 4: Well, I mean the thing is, yeah, she was this 168 00:08:25,360 --> 00:08:28,640 Speaker 4: honorable student in this sweetheart, but also she did have 169 00:08:28,720 --> 00:08:30,760 Speaker 4: this sort of you know, she was the girl who 170 00:08:30,880 --> 00:08:36,040 Speaker 4: fight you on the playground side. And basically she got 171 00:08:36,080 --> 00:08:39,040 Speaker 4: married very young because you know, she was a dramatic creature. 172 00:08:39,080 --> 00:08:44,040 Speaker 4: She wanted to fall in love. She married this other guy, Broy, 173 00:08:44,400 --> 00:08:47,520 Speaker 4: who was also a criminal who wound up getting arrested. 174 00:08:47,720 --> 00:08:51,000 Speaker 4: So she was actually married when she met Clyde, and 175 00:08:51,480 --> 00:08:54,120 Speaker 4: she was still married when they both died. You know, 176 00:08:56,000 --> 00:08:58,520 Speaker 4: but you know, he was in jail. She had lost 177 00:08:58,600 --> 00:09:03,480 Speaker 4: her job because of the depression, and she was taking 178 00:09:03,520 --> 00:09:05,520 Speaker 4: care of a friend, just hanging out in her house 179 00:09:05,840 --> 00:09:08,840 Speaker 4: and he walked in and it was, you know, that 180 00:09:08,880 --> 00:09:11,240 Speaker 4: sort of mythical love at first sight. You hear about 181 00:09:11,280 --> 00:09:13,080 Speaker 4: where two people look at each other and the room 182 00:09:13,120 --> 00:09:16,360 Speaker 4: stops and everybody sees it. And it was that kind 183 00:09:16,400 --> 00:09:21,240 Speaker 4: of devotion until the end. Basically, I mean, that's sort 184 00:09:21,280 --> 00:09:24,400 Speaker 4: of what brought her low, was just she worshiped him, 185 00:09:25,040 --> 00:09:27,719 Speaker 4: and to be fair, he felt the same way about her. 186 00:09:28,840 --> 00:09:32,000 Speaker 4: And you know, she kind of followed him down this 187 00:09:32,200 --> 00:09:35,199 Speaker 4: path and at the beginning of their relationship she begged 188 00:09:35,280 --> 00:09:38,520 Speaker 4: him to reform, but he went up in East Camp Prison, 189 00:09:38,640 --> 00:09:41,280 Speaker 4: a terrible place where he was horrifically mistreated, where he 190 00:09:41,280 --> 00:09:45,680 Speaker 4: committed his first murder and of self defense, to be fair, 191 00:09:47,280 --> 00:09:50,640 Speaker 4: and he was then consumed with revenge that he was 192 00:09:50,720 --> 00:09:54,920 Speaker 4: going to go back knock over East to prison free 193 00:09:54,960 --> 00:09:58,559 Speaker 4: everybody kill the guards. You know that that vengeance fantasy, 194 00:09:59,640 --> 00:10:02,720 Speaker 4: and and that was really kind of what their crimes 195 00:10:02,800 --> 00:10:03,480 Speaker 4: Free was about. 196 00:10:03,480 --> 00:10:03,839 Speaker 1: In a way. 197 00:10:03,880 --> 00:10:06,440 Speaker 4: He spent more time knocking over armories and trying to 198 00:10:06,440 --> 00:10:09,600 Speaker 4: get people to help him take Easton than he did 199 00:10:09,760 --> 00:10:15,079 Speaker 4: trying to rob and make money. And you know, she 200 00:10:15,240 --> 00:10:18,319 Speaker 4: sort of followed him down that path. And I mean, 201 00:10:18,480 --> 00:10:21,880 Speaker 4: to be fair again, he actually did break people out 202 00:10:21,920 --> 00:10:26,080 Speaker 4: of Eastern Prison, yeah, and she helped him. So there 203 00:10:26,160 --> 00:10:26,400 Speaker 4: is that. 204 00:10:27,320 --> 00:10:30,920 Speaker 2: He doesn't become a big time criminal until right toward 205 00:10:31,000 --> 00:10:33,520 Speaker 2: the end the breakout of prison, and also they do 206 00:10:33,559 --> 00:10:35,640 Speaker 2: a he breaks people out and then they start robbing 207 00:10:35,679 --> 00:10:38,480 Speaker 2: banks and their actual big time criminals. But as you note, 208 00:10:38,760 --> 00:10:42,239 Speaker 2: most of what they did was robbing liquor stores, gas stations, 209 00:10:42,520 --> 00:10:44,800 Speaker 2: grocery stores, small time stuff, right. 210 00:10:45,400 --> 00:10:49,680 Speaker 4: Yeah, yeah, stealing cars, stuff like that. Again, just kind 211 00:10:49,720 --> 00:10:53,839 Speaker 4: of enough to keep going, you know. And also one 212 00:10:53,880 --> 00:10:56,040 Speaker 4: thing I else to do point out is that you know, 213 00:10:56,360 --> 00:10:59,520 Speaker 4: Clyde was not a great planner, so. 214 00:10:59,440 --> 00:11:00,760 Speaker 3: It's a great gang. 215 00:11:01,480 --> 00:11:03,560 Speaker 4: Yeah, he was a driver. If he had been like 216 00:11:03,679 --> 00:11:05,560 Speaker 4: I'm going to be the driver for a big gang, 217 00:11:06,160 --> 00:11:09,120 Speaker 4: he could have been a big time criminal. But you know, 218 00:11:09,200 --> 00:11:14,360 Speaker 4: trying to lead like whatever local bumpkins and you know, 219 00:11:14,760 --> 00:11:17,439 Speaker 4: recent escapees he could ring together for a couple of 220 00:11:17,480 --> 00:11:19,520 Speaker 4: weeks was not going to get him to you know, 221 00:11:19,600 --> 00:11:21,120 Speaker 4: Dillinger's status. 222 00:11:21,760 --> 00:11:24,960 Speaker 2: They get a lot of bad stuff, some of it circumstantial. 223 00:11:25,000 --> 00:11:27,880 Speaker 2: They get into circumstances where somebody else who's with them 224 00:11:27,880 --> 00:11:31,120 Speaker 2: as part of their little gang goes overboard kills somebody, 225 00:11:31,160 --> 00:11:34,000 Speaker 2: and then then they're really wanted. But they really get 226 00:11:34,240 --> 00:11:36,920 Speaker 2: become notorious because of these photos they get released. 227 00:11:36,960 --> 00:11:38,800 Speaker 3: You have the one in your book. 228 00:11:39,040 --> 00:11:41,080 Speaker 2: A Bonnie with their leg up on the bumper of 229 00:11:41,120 --> 00:11:45,920 Speaker 2: a getaway car, holding a gun and smoking a cigar, 230 00:11:46,640 --> 00:11:47,640 Speaker 2: and it was all stage. 231 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:49,800 Speaker 3: He had staged this thing. They took some photos. 232 00:11:49,800 --> 00:11:52,320 Speaker 2: How is it that those photos get out into the 233 00:11:52,320 --> 00:11:56,120 Speaker 2: public and how are they used and what's the overall effect? 234 00:11:57,720 --> 00:12:00,000 Speaker 4: Well, how the photos got out into the public was 235 00:12:00,120 --> 00:12:03,400 Speaker 4: during the Battle of Joplin, as they called it, when 236 00:12:03,400 --> 00:12:09,880 Speaker 4: they took a cabin in Joplin, Missouri. Bonnie Clyde, Clyde's 237 00:12:09,920 --> 00:12:14,080 Speaker 4: brother Buck, his wife Blanch, and the perennial sidekick Wd 238 00:12:15,200 --> 00:12:19,840 Speaker 4: and the you know, they are foolish and noisy and rambunctious, 239 00:12:19,880 --> 00:12:23,560 Speaker 4: and the police notice they are there, think they're just bootleggers. 240 00:12:23,600 --> 00:12:27,000 Speaker 4: Obviously not you know, there's a shootout. They have to 241 00:12:27,040 --> 00:12:29,679 Speaker 4: flee and leave everything, something they had to do constantly, 242 00:12:29,840 --> 00:12:33,480 Speaker 4: just leave everything. And one of the things they left 243 00:12:33,520 --> 00:12:37,280 Speaker 4: behind was this camera where which they had used to 244 00:12:37,480 --> 00:12:39,680 Speaker 4: just you know, take photos. And there were you know, 245 00:12:39,760 --> 00:12:42,560 Speaker 4: cheesecake photos of Blanche and a lot of other photos 246 00:12:42,559 --> 00:12:46,719 Speaker 4: on the road. But they had done a series of photos. 247 00:12:46,800 --> 00:12:49,280 Speaker 4: And you know, there's also the legendary one of also 248 00:12:49,760 --> 00:12:53,760 Speaker 4: Bonnie pointing a gun at Clyde, and so when these 249 00:12:53,880 --> 00:12:57,800 Speaker 4: got out again, they published ones, Oh yeah, here's Clyde 250 00:12:57,800 --> 00:12:59,800 Speaker 4: with his gun, and YadA, YadA, YadA. But people had 251 00:13:00,240 --> 00:13:04,440 Speaker 4: photos like that before. The photos of Bonnie posing with 252 00:13:04,480 --> 00:13:07,880 Speaker 4: a gun were not something that had really been seen before, 253 00:13:07,960 --> 00:13:10,760 Speaker 4: so of course, you know, what are the newspapers going 254 00:13:10,840 --> 00:13:15,199 Speaker 4: to run with? And then that turned into this whole 255 00:13:15,240 --> 00:13:18,120 Speaker 4: myth of like, she runs the gang, she's this criminal, 256 00:13:18,160 --> 00:13:21,080 Speaker 4: because again it's kind of a better story, and that's 257 00:13:21,080 --> 00:13:23,760 Speaker 4: you know, who really knew at the time, and especially 258 00:13:23,800 --> 00:13:26,280 Speaker 4: because you know she had staged the photo smoking a 259 00:13:26,320 --> 00:13:28,800 Speaker 4: cigar with a pistol on pointing a gun at Clyde. 260 00:13:28,880 --> 00:13:35,320 Speaker 2: You know, it's it's amazing you detail their exploits and 261 00:13:35,520 --> 00:13:38,240 Speaker 2: so much, I mean nearly everything that they do is 262 00:13:38,320 --> 00:13:41,960 Speaker 2: just circumstance. They bounce from one hideout to another, trying 263 00:13:41,960 --> 00:13:45,319 Speaker 2: to stay ahead of the law, make really bad decisions 264 00:13:45,360 --> 00:13:48,520 Speaker 2: pretty much every step of the way that eventually, you know, 265 00:13:49,000 --> 00:13:52,880 Speaker 2: at leads to some terrible situations. And but you know, 266 00:13:52,960 --> 00:13:55,840 Speaker 2: there was no master plan. They did not have access 267 00:13:55,880 --> 00:13:59,480 Speaker 2: to criminal resources like the big name gangsters of that era. 268 00:13:59,520 --> 00:14:02,240 Speaker 2: They were on her own, and it seemed like they 269 00:14:02,320 --> 00:14:06,000 Speaker 2: made so many dumb mistakes, stay someplace too long, or 270 00:14:06,280 --> 00:14:08,560 Speaker 2: drop the bloody bandages on the side of the road 271 00:14:08,600 --> 00:14:12,520 Speaker 2: that gets the police on their trail. Talk about that 272 00:14:12,600 --> 00:14:15,160 Speaker 2: period a little bit and how it ends in such 273 00:14:15,160 --> 00:14:18,240 Speaker 2: a bad way. The last couple of weeks of their life, 274 00:14:18,440 --> 00:14:22,200 Speaker 2: as you described in great detail, was absolutely horrible, horrible. 275 00:14:24,160 --> 00:14:27,320 Speaker 4: Yeah, as I had mentioned, Bonnie had had this horrible 276 00:14:27,400 --> 00:14:30,680 Speaker 4: accident which unfortunately was caused by Clyde just driving too 277 00:14:30,720 --> 00:14:33,440 Speaker 4: fast and crashing off of a bridge. She winds up 278 00:14:33,440 --> 00:14:36,160 Speaker 4: pinned under a burning car, getting hit with battery acid. 279 00:14:36,920 --> 00:14:40,360 Speaker 4: You know, her, she's basically crippled. You know, she is 280 00:14:40,440 --> 00:14:44,120 Speaker 4: burned to the bone, in agony, completely wrecked, and they 281 00:14:44,160 --> 00:14:45,800 Speaker 4: have nothing for her. All they can do is just 282 00:14:45,840 --> 00:14:48,920 Speaker 4: drive around on back roads and try to steal aspirin 283 00:14:49,040 --> 00:14:52,520 Speaker 4: for her, you know, And that is sort of also 284 00:14:52,600 --> 00:14:55,480 Speaker 4: one of the moments where you know, Clyde actually almost 285 00:14:55,520 --> 00:14:57,800 Speaker 4: grows up a little bit and you know, realize that 286 00:14:57,800 --> 00:14:59,600 Speaker 4: he will never leave her, and he's going to do 287 00:14:59,640 --> 00:15:04,040 Speaker 4: anything to protect her. But unfortunately, you know, again that 288 00:15:04,120 --> 00:15:06,920 Speaker 4: doesn't involve trying to make any sort of concrete plans 289 00:15:07,040 --> 00:15:09,680 Speaker 4: or get her help or get organized, and she won't 290 00:15:09,760 --> 00:15:11,840 Speaker 4: leave him. He does try to get her to leave him, 291 00:15:12,760 --> 00:15:15,480 Speaker 4: and so towards the end they you know, they do 292 00:15:15,560 --> 00:15:18,200 Speaker 4: this breakout of East and they sort of pull the 293 00:15:18,240 --> 00:15:21,040 Speaker 4: gang back together and that's where they kind of do 294 00:15:21,160 --> 00:15:24,880 Speaker 4: some bank robberies and manage it, but things fall apart. 295 00:15:25,000 --> 00:15:31,520 Speaker 4: They wind up with this this woman Mary, who sort 296 00:15:31,520 --> 00:15:35,480 Speaker 4: of causes problems with Bonnie. She's the girlfriend of one 297 00:15:35,520 --> 00:15:39,040 Speaker 4: of the new gang members. She stirs up trouble. Eventually 298 00:15:39,120 --> 00:15:41,400 Speaker 4: that all breaks up because they try to convince Bonnie 299 00:15:41,440 --> 00:15:43,760 Speaker 4: she should kill Clyde and is sleep and as you 300 00:15:43,800 --> 00:15:46,160 Speaker 4: can imagine, Bonnie doesn't take kindly to that, and neither 301 00:15:46,200 --> 00:15:49,760 Speaker 4: does Clyde, so break up the gang. So then they're 302 00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:54,000 Speaker 4: back to just sort of ping ponging around trying to 303 00:15:54,080 --> 00:15:57,280 Speaker 4: just knock over whatever they can. The reason reduced actually 304 00:15:57,280 --> 00:16:02,080 Speaker 4: taking things from their family, like begging their own starving 305 00:16:02,160 --> 00:16:04,120 Speaker 4: families that they used to give things for, like can 306 00:16:04,160 --> 00:16:06,280 Speaker 4: you get us some food and blankets. At one point 307 00:16:06,960 --> 00:16:09,720 Speaker 4: they had to flee and were so bloody and shot 308 00:16:09,800 --> 00:16:11,320 Speaker 4: up they had to just get rid of their clothes 309 00:16:11,360 --> 00:16:15,320 Speaker 4: and drive around with sheep songs, and you know, at 310 00:16:15,360 --> 00:16:19,320 Speaker 4: the end, their last gang member kind of you know, 311 00:16:19,480 --> 00:16:23,000 Speaker 4: as sells them out basically, you know, his father does 312 00:16:23,040 --> 00:16:26,240 Speaker 4: to try to save his son. They wind up they 313 00:16:26,320 --> 00:16:30,080 Speaker 4: had tried to avoid killing cops, but they wind up 314 00:16:30,160 --> 00:16:34,120 Speaker 4: killing cops because gang members drink and get crazy. And 315 00:16:34,320 --> 00:16:37,000 Speaker 4: this is what then sort of also pushes the we 316 00:16:37,080 --> 00:16:41,760 Speaker 4: must get Bonnie and Clyde at any cost, and at 317 00:16:41,760 --> 00:16:44,080 Speaker 4: the end they're sort of sold out. They're set up 318 00:16:44,080 --> 00:16:48,520 Speaker 4: in this ambush and that's the end of them. And 319 00:16:48,760 --> 00:16:53,880 Speaker 4: one interesting kind note is that Ted Hinton, who had 320 00:16:53,920 --> 00:16:57,400 Speaker 4: been one of the who was one of the chief 321 00:16:57,520 --> 00:17:01,240 Speaker 4: law enforcement officers, had actually known von before she met Clyde, 322 00:17:01,280 --> 00:17:02,840 Speaker 4: and she was a waitress and he had a crush 323 00:17:02,880 --> 00:17:07,879 Speaker 4: on her. She worked near the courthouse, and she was 324 00:17:08,040 --> 00:17:09,919 Speaker 4: literally one of the people who put a bullet in 325 00:17:09,960 --> 00:17:14,040 Speaker 4: her many bullets, and he was the person who opened 326 00:17:14,040 --> 00:17:16,000 Speaker 4: the door and caught her body as it fell out, 327 00:17:16,560 --> 00:17:18,439 Speaker 4: which is just sort of chilling. 328 00:17:19,600 --> 00:17:23,040 Speaker 2: Yeah, your description of what happens at the end, I mean, 329 00:17:23,080 --> 00:17:26,600 Speaker 2: we all remember the movie version of it, but it's 330 00:17:26,640 --> 00:17:28,840 Speaker 2: even more horrible than that. And then what happens to 331 00:17:28,880 --> 00:17:30,840 Speaker 2: their bodies after that, you know, I guess you know, 332 00:17:30,880 --> 00:17:33,720 Speaker 2: they're paraded through town and then there are are funerals. 333 00:17:33,840 --> 00:17:36,840 Speaker 3: Are these are huge events, right yeah. 334 00:17:36,720 --> 00:17:40,119 Speaker 4: Attended by over ten thousand people came to Bonnie's funeral. 335 00:17:41,600 --> 00:17:44,200 Speaker 4: Funeral they had to throw out like the local drunks 336 00:17:44,240 --> 00:17:44,840 Speaker 4: and stuff. 337 00:17:45,080 --> 00:17:48,320 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 338 00:17:48,320 --> 00:17:51,600 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot 339 00:17:51,600 --> 00:17:52,400 Speaker 1: com for more