Radio Transcription
Monday, January 26, 2026 at 2:59 AM
Transcription
AF4LL K7WFD. Well, very good. Sounds like you had a very active holiday season and ready to get back to the daily grind or the daily light. Skipped around my list here, aren't I? Let's get my list straight in order and Talk to Joan KX2CW who so helpfully pointed out that Dean was there somewhere. All right, I'm just going to talk over this. Hi, it's Joan, and I'm reading Kate Quinn's The Rose Code, the third in her trilogy of Women in Espionage and Second World War. I have a very small glass of sherry, sherry scone, and I've connected my 33 centimeter 1080p monitor up to my DVD player with the 1080p upscaler in it, and I decided to watch a favorite episode of Midsommar Murders beyond the course of the day. First, the portrait of a wealthy goat forefather is found smashed to shreds in the local museum. Then a string of unearthly happenings in the museum and its graveyard terrify the community. and Troy are caught on to separate fact from fiction. Of course, it's on murders though, so it's ambiguous. What is Midsummer Murders, you may ask? It's the cozy villages of Midsummer County where they reveal their most sinister secrets and these darkly humorous British tellers and mysteries. John Nettles starved at the unflappable detective chief Inspector Byron Bee. Based on the novels by Carolyn Graham of whom I've read three of her novels and the novels go way further than the television episodes. There's one her seventh I think Midsummer Murder novel was over the top for them to even make it into British television.
Technical Details
| Transcription ID: | 735df5ea-e7c5-4aa0-8114-928a9b88b4cf |
| Audio File: | 20260103211253.mp3 |
| Language: | EN |
| Timestamp: | 2026-01-26 02:59:23 PST |