Episode 6 — The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes

Grab your deerstalkers, fill up your pipe from your Persian slipper and let’s talk Holmes! We discuss the famous detective Sherlock Holmes, in particular the one portrayed by Robert Stephens in the 1970 film The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes. This episode is a bit longer partly because it’s the first time we talk about the character in general and partly because Katy is still learning how to succinctly summarize plots. We are enthusiastic about Victorian history if not experts on the subject. Katy shares behind-the-scenes Nessie prop stories, Carrie doesn’t think Holmes is funny, Maddy laughs at farts and Mack is a Christopher Lee fanboy. We talk real-life Loch Ness adventures, monks, chloroform, and attempt likely-offensive Russian accents with varying success. Originally recorded July 2017.

Please Note: There are a few instances we use an outdated and frankly derogatory term for a little person; this is the term used throughout the film itself and we slip up a few times when discussing this movie. We caught ourselves most but not all of the time. It was definitely not meant as derogatory or demeaning; however we understand that regardless of intent it was used carelessly and for that we apologize. Please visit The Little People of America website for more information and ways to support the community.

TW: derogatory and outdated term for little person


Correction Section

The Baker Street Irregulars are a real thing that began in 1934 and is “[t]he literary society dedicated to the study of Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and the Victorian world.” However, they are very, very exclusive (only 692 have ever been one, as of June 2019) and Katy was thinking of what is known as their smaller factions or “scion societies.” They are very passionate and there are a lot of fascinating rules and traditions involved; for more info or to find a local club, visit their website by clicking here.  

England and Wales technically decriminalized homosexuality between men in 1967 with an age of consent at twenty-one, but Scotland didn’t until 1980 and Northern Ireland in 1982. Homosexuality between women was never legally banned or criminalized by any legislation in the UK. For more information please see A Short History of LGBT Rights in the UK

Christopher Lee and Ian Fleming did know each other but way before World War II and the SOE; Lee’s mother married Fleming’s uncle when Lee was young making them step-cousins.

Katy said Philip but she knows it was Albert who was married to Victoria. There are a lot of royals. Sometimes she slips up. She is sorry.

Episode 5 — Rebecca

WHO was Rebecca? WHAT was her deal? WHY is everyone so obsessed with her and her underwear? We watch the first mystery that is brand new to all of us, Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca (1940), and (wo)man, do we have some opinions. As modern “woke”* people, we give the main character an actual name and talk about feminism, lesbianism, and the control of women and power dynamics of 1940’s Hollywood. Maddy wants to become a dick-punching time traveler, Katy gives some very unresearched and ultimately incorrect facts about Hitchcock and lesbians, Carrie does some live book research, and Mack talks great mustaches. Listen carefully for terrible horse impressions and Maddy’s constant anger noises! Originally recorded July 2017.

*We like to think we’re some level of “woke” but understand it’s a process and ultimately will make mistakes and hopefully learn and grow with each one

TW: Cancer, suicide


Correction Section

Katy would like everyone to know that she knows she said Lawrence Olivier was in Lawrence of Arabia but she was thinking of Spartacus and it was just the double “Lawrence” that made her brain go “……”. 

Also Hitchcock probably didn’t hate lesbians that way Katy insinuated; as stated in the episode she truly knows nothing really about him and was just making a generalized assumption based on Hollywood rules and the fact that she saw The Celluloid Closet one time.

Episode 4 — The Great Muppet Caper

Get ready for our scariest episode so far—we watch the 1981 classic The Great Muppet Caper! The Muppets sing, dance, fall out of buses, and more while investigating a jewel heist in a movie Carrie subtitled: “Piggy and Kermit’s London Romance.” We talk about the nightmare that is an eight-foot Miss Piggy suit, drugs, latchkey VHS’s, and terrifying Muppet parentage. Katy talks up Admiral Lord Nelson, Carrie can’t stop seeing other movie locations, Maddy lays out the truth about Mr. Darcy’s lake dip, and Mack of course tries his hardest to keep us on track. Check out our Instagram for photos of terrifying robot insides, the puppets of the O’Brien home, and more. Wocka wocka wocka! Originally recorded June 2017.

TW: Minor assault

Carrie is very excited that she recognized the restaurant from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is the same one in The Great Muppet Caper AND that this random pond in the movie is the same random pond as the one in Lost in Austen.

Episode 3 — Fargo

For our third episode we get c-c-c-cold in Fargo! (Seriously you will feel cold watching it there’s ice and snow all over) We watch the first episode of the first season of Fargo, “The Crocodile’s Dilemma,” which aired in 2014. Katy still can’t keep a synopsis short, Carrie and Maddy each individually coined the phrase “Agent of Chaos,” and Mack spends some more Joke Bucks. We talk difficult American accents, uncomfortable ham massages via the villainy of Rachel Ray, and Nicholas Cage speaks like a native Minnesotan. Plus we learn from our mother that not every movie with snow should be watched at Christmastime. Bundle up and let’s talk men’s haircuts! And murder investigations also, we guess. Originally recorded June 2017. 

TW: Stabbing and bashing, abuse, blood

The infamous haircut
Tander = Mom
Nanyerd = Dad

Episode 2 — Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Out of the mystery jar for our second episode is a personal favorite investigative gang of all of ours—the Scoobies! We love Buffy The Vampire Slayer and were jazzed to talk demons and dating so soon into this endeavour. Buffy and her friends try to figure out who threatens the students at Sunnydale High in episode eighteen of season three, “Earshot”. Originally airing out of sequence on September 21, 1999, it was a Very Special Episode for a number or reasons. In fact, Den of Geek says that “‘Earshot’ is “as close to Agatha Christie as Buffy ever gets”! We talk ’90s fashion, worksheets, cross-eyed nipples, and more! This episode marks the first appearance of spending “Joke Bucks” for making terrible jokes, as well as actual art from Maddy herself. Check out our Instagram for that as well as some great Halloween shenanigans! Be warned—there are series spoilers for Buffy as a whole, so don’t be mad if you’re not caught up on a show that ended in 2003. Put on your yummy sushi pajamas and get cozy! Originally recorded May 2017.

TW: Guns, school shootings, suicide

RAT POISON BRAND RAT POISON

Episode 1 — Poirot

Bonjour listeners! Welcome to Mostly Murder (But Sometimes Not), a podcast where four siblings discuss mysteries and whodunits throughout a vast array of pop culture. Recorded originally in May 2017, the inaugural episode of what is sure to be an illustrious podcast starts with us discussing one of the most famous detectives in the Western canon—Hercule Poirot! Although more recently made famous in adaptations starring John Malkovitch and Kenneth Branaugh, we felt it only right to stick with the man who played the Belgian detective for 24 years, 13 seasons, 70 episodes, and sporting countless mustaches: the brilliant David Suchet. Choosing an episode of Agatha Christie’s Poirot was difficult but we start the whodunit discussions with season nine, episode four, “The Hollow”, which aired in the UK September 26, 2004. Join us while we talk of weird lip liner, Danny DeVito, fake diseases, and of course, little grey cells. Bon!