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šŸŽ™ļø Here’s a chilling clip from our latest episode of Histories of Horror—this time we’re unraveling the dark legacy of the Missouri Killer.

From the twisted psychology behind the crimes to the echoes of fear that still haunt communities, this episode confronts the shadows of Midwestern history with unflinching detail

šŸ”— Listen to the full episode now on YouTube or Spotify and step into the unsettling corridors of true crime and haunted memory.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/5RZ55ZXZS0h2PT83ZDBqNz?si=zXlAnGkBTUqTvLgM4sJyrg

#MissouriKiller #TrueCrime #HistoriesOfHorror #DarkLegacy #MidwestMysteries #HauntedHistory #PsychologicalHorror #EchoesOfFear

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Transcript
00:00Because it restores their humanity. These women and girls were daughters, friends, workers, dreamers. By remembering them as full people and not just a victim, we can reclaim their dignity from the anonymity of the killer tried to impose.
00:14So all of that secrecy and dehumanizing them can kind of, you know, evaporate because we're bearing witness as an act of resistance against their race.
00:25And I think it also serves as a reminder of the hidden toll of fear. The city in the 1980s wasn't a disaster zone like post-Katrina New Orleans, but the community still served the corrosion of the trust.
00:36The river became a signal of vulnerability and that collection and ease is a part of the history that must be acknowledged.
00:44And the thing with this is, I agree, it's about giving space to those who were silenced and remembering the women of the Missouri River.
00:53So the first victim was Annette Parker.
01:01And.
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