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Glenn Washington
I take a stroll down to the park to steal the children's candy. The mothers scream at me to leave as I drink swigs of brandy. You've crossed over a split. Stay tuned.
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Glenn Washington
Hey Sal, Hank, what's going on? We haven't worked a case in I just bought my car at Carvana and it was so easy. Too easy. Think something's up? You tell me. They got thousands of options, found a great car at a great price.
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Glenn Washington
And it got delivered the next day. It sounds like Carvana just makes it easy to buy your car, Hank. Yeah, you're right. Case closed.
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Glenn Washington
In sixth grade, I lived near a lake. Small town called Sanford, Michigan. Sanford Lake. Awesome place. Understand, my family didn't have nothing like this. But my friends, their dads worked at a fancy Dow Chemical. And mostly they had houses right on the lake with docks and boats. We had water ski and jet ski and swim. And all my buddies lived a short bike ride away, especially my bestie. We were free range kids, wild in the woods. The water, the streets. Hung out tough. The best friend a kid could have. And not too far away, there was a livery stable where I learned to keep horses. There's a little store with video games and snacks. And besides my truly psychotic 6th grade teacher, everything was awesome. I loved it. But after that one year, my sixth grade year, we moved away. I've never been back. Not ever. So imagine just a few years ago, May 20, 2020, right near the beginning of the pandemic. I'm sort of halfway, kind of almost listening to the news, and I hear that Sanford Dam is about to bre. Sanford is about to be overrun, deluged. A Midwest tsunami, a new Katrina. And I run to my computer and see that it's happening right now. That all those pretty houses on my beautiful lake are underwater. I can barely breathe, thinking, what about my buddy? Back then we didn't have Internet, Facebook, Instagram. But we do now. I look up, my friend, see your name, see your number. No way could it be really, really? It's been decades. But I text anyway. Hey, man, this is Glenn. You all right? And I'm waiting, staring at the phone, staring. And I see those rolling dots at the bottom. Processing. Processing. Then. Dude. Yeah, it's crazy. We're running chicken houses for folk now, but looks like most people are making it out with the clothes on their backs.
Elise
Where you been?
Glenn Washington
Laugh. Emoji. And I laugh. And then I cry. You think you left the place you left the person behind decades ago, but that is not the way this works. Stuk starts now. Sa. We begin with a story from another lake. Elise. She's a young girl from Atlanta and wants to celebrate the 4th of July at one of her favorite places. Lake Lanier looks like the perfect long weekend. Just swimming and riding jet skis with her dad. But Lisa's perfect day is about to take a turn. Spooked.
Elise
So that day, I wake up super excited. Me and my dad are gonna go jet skiing with his very good friend Jay. It's my favorite thing in the world. I beg for us to go to the lake. All the time I remember putting on my bathing suit, we packed some snacks. The lake was packed that day. There's other families joking, laughing. There was music going. I could hear the sizzling of the grills, smell like the hot dogs and hamburgers that were going. And the sun was just shining. There was not a cloud in the sky. We were in a little bit of like a cove. There's trees just as far as your eye can see. There's an island in the middle of the lake that has one big tree on it. And there's lots of rocks, rocks everywhere. We put the Jet Skis in the water. My dad and his friend I was in the water playing, splashing around a little bit with my dad. He was splashing water at me, and then he decided to take me around on the Jet Ski as he'd done multiple times before. I sit down on my knees between my dad's legs as he's standing up, put my hands gripping the side of the skis, and just like that, we take off. We went around that little island with the big tree. My hair is blowing in the wind. I just feel like a bird, like I'm flying. And I'm thinking, this is the best day ever. It was later in the afternoon, almost time for us to pack up. We're back in the shore after a Jet Ski ride, and I am sitting on the Jet Ski on my knees. My dad is standing in the water. His friend Jay is on my left side. I can hear them talking about plans for the rest of the day, maybe going to get dinner or leave. And I just am thinking, I love the lake. I don't want to leave the lake. The Jet Ski was turned off at this point and it was starting to sink down a little bit. My dad tells Jay to turn on the ski because it's taking in water. He turns on the ski and the Jet Ski rumbled so loud it terrifies me. I instinctively turned around and I grabbed the handlebars and in that moment, I grabbed the throttle as well. And all of a sudden, the Jet Ski takes off. So f.
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Laurel
Burgundy.
Kat Duke
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Glenn Washington
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Elise
The water is going by very quickly. It almost looks like glass. The roar of the engine. It's so loud, it's almost deafening. The wind was whipping so hard that it was. My face hurt. I am bouncing up and down off of the bottom of the Jet Ski. I'm looking around because I'm by myself. There's no one else on this Jet Ski. Where's my dad? Where am I going? I look up. I'm going in a straight line directly towards this hill. And the whole hill is covered in rocks, like big boulder rocks. All different sizes, all different shapes. I was very scared, but I can't let go of either of the handlebars. My hands are locked. They are so tight that my knuckles are hurting. I'm getting very close to this rock embankment when I see something blue out of the corner of my eye. I turn my head to the left and there is a lady maybe about four or five feet away from me. She is not in the water. She's above the water, floating right around my eye level. She's sitting on her knees, her hands resting on her kneecaps. When I saw her, time slowed down. The moment that she appeared, it was like everything froze. She has on a blue crocheted knit top. She has long blonde hair, probably to her belly button, and bluish greenish eyes. She has a soft smile on her face and it just filled me with like a wave of calm. I remember thinking, wow, she's so beautiful. She looks like one of my Barbies. She smiled at me and said, this may hurt a little bit, but everything will be okay. At that exact moment, she disappears. And I turn, I snap my head back forward, and I hit the rocks and I fly through the air. I hit the tree. I can feel, like a little sting on my forehead. But as soon as I feel it, I feel my vest get really tight because I'm wearing a life jacket. It's like something grabbing me as tight as it could and pulling me back away from the tree. And then whatever it is lets go of me. That's when time speeds up again and I slam into the water face first. I can see the water and I start to see the red swirls of blood. And I'm so mesmerized. By the way that the light's hitting it and it's mixing with the water, I thought, huh, that looks so beautiful. All of a sudden, I felt somebody behind me bear hugging me. I feel the wind hitting my face, and I was able to breathe. I look at this man, this stranger I've never met. He starts frantically screaming, the baby's alive. The baby's alive.
Glenn Washington
She's alive.
Elise
Next thing I know, there is a crowd of people, and they're all, like, gasping and insisting that I lay down. My dad and Jay get up there. They're huffing and puffing. They're saying over and over, we told you, hit the red button. Hit the red button. Oh, my gosh. Are you okay? I was very confused. I tell them I'm okay. Can I just go back to playing in the water? My dad just looks like a deer in headlights. He says, no, baby, we can see your skull. We get to the hospital, they remove this bandage on my head, and I see my mom. She's standing right there, and she looks horrified. They had to DO X rays, MRIs, you name it, to make sure they didn't have broken bones, swelling. They found nothing. It was just a wound on my forehead. The doctor said, you know, you're one really lucky and blessed girl. Like this could have been really bad. I remember thinking, okay, yeah, I guess so. They gave me a bunch of stitches, and that was it. After the hospital, I tell my mom in the car about the lady in blue. I say, the lady in the blue dress? The lady in the blue dress. Where is she? My mom says, what lady? And I explain the. The nice lady. When I hit the tree, she threw me over her shoulder as she flew away. Who is she? She whips her head around and said, baby, I don't know who that lady is. Tell me again, what did she do? She had pulled over. At this point, she's looking at me, and her eyes get wide, and she says, I believe you saw an angel. You should thank her because she saved your life. I was like, okay, I have an angel. The accident left me with a large scar perfectly in the middle of my forehead. For years, every time someone asked me what happened, I would tell them the story. I would tell people I'd seen an angel. I just always called her my guardian angel. In the blue dress. My lady in the blue dress. Last year, I had gotten on TikTok, and I had seen a lot of videos about Lake Lanier, and I decided to share my story. So I hear we're telling our weird stories about Lake Lanier. Okay, cool. So, hey, I'm an Atlanta native, grew up about 30. My video started getting a lot of traction. I started getting a lot of comments. Have you heard of the lady of the Lake? The lady of the Lake in Blue? I had never heard of the lady of the Lake. After a few hours of having my video up, I received a comment and it said, hey, the lady in Blue is actually Delia May Parker. Google her, period. I googled Delia's name and immediately there's pages upon pages. I'm clicking on one, I'm reading everything on it. I click the next one, I start reading everything on it. I started to try to tell myself it wasn't her until I read an article that hid pictures of her. She did have long hair. Her eye color was the same. Her face was very similar. I am increasingly getting freaked out. Like my whole body is covered in chill bumps. Delia Mae Parker was a woman in her early 20s who in the 50s, was working at the Riverside Military Academy. She went out with one of her friends for a night out. They were, I believe, going to go dancing. She borrowed a blue dress and they went missing that night. They were never located. They put a headstone up for her and her body was not found until the early 90s. They unfortunately crashed and they found her friend's car in the lake. The detail that made me the most uncomfortable was her crash site was not far from where my accident happened. I'm sitting there reckoning with myself. I had held onto this image in my mind that this was my guardian angel. And I realized that the thing that saved me, it was a ghost. I do believe that Delia is a spirit that does help people. There are so many accidents on that lake. Every single week I read about one or it's in the news that another person has either drowned or been in a boating accident or a tubing accident. And I've watched multiple videos of people's encounters with her that they'd had almost like a near death experience as well and that she'd saved them. And so I do believe that Delia is out there trying to protect people from meeting the same fate that she did. I do believe at this point I owe it to Delia to go back to Lake Lanier to say thank you for saving my life. However, I will not be jet skiing this time. I'll be saying it from the shore.
Glenn Washington
Thank you so much, Elise, for sharing your story with Spooked Episode was scouted by Evan Stern, was scored by Yari Bundy. It was produced by Eric Yanez.
Elise
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Healthcare Worker (Figs Scrubs)
Angel Soft Soft and strong.
Laurel
Simple.
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Laurel
GoFundMe is the world's number one fundraising platform, trusted by over 200 million people. Start your GoFundMe today at gofundme.com that's gofundme.com gofundme.com hi, I'm Chandler Garcia.
Healthcare Worker (Figs Scrubs)
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Glenn Washington
Now, Laurel is a college student who's always been tight with cats. She knows just how to scratch their chins. She knows how much they love the water from the tuna can. But one evening, these kitty cats, they start acting real strange. Spooked.
Laurel
All of my roommates had gone for the summer. Most of the people in town were gone. I was working in this room alone in the basement of the library. I could literally go an entire week and see nobody but the checkout clerk at the grocery store. I didn't have anyone except my cat. I named her Bastet, after the Egyptian cat goddess. I'm one of those nutty people who talks to cats, and I use a baby voice.
Elise
Aw.
Laurel
Hi, Bastet. How are you doing today? Oh, do you like your. Do you like your kibble? She was very independent but affectionate. Calico. She was friendly with people, but she wasn't really a lap cat, you know, very inquisitive. Wanted to know what was going on. Liked to go outside and hunt and roam. But she would always come back in at night. There were a lot of cats in this neighborhood. Cats have always come to me. That sounds kind of silly when I say it, but I have often had cats just turn up on my porch, injured or sick or starving. I take them in for a few days. I, you know, get them stable. I find them a home. Over the years, I've found homes for probably 20 cats. That's been my whole life. One night, I was at home. I was working on a painting. Had my watercolors out. The best at was hanging out with me in my room like she normally was. Around 10pm I started getting thirsty and hungry. I wanted some juice. Fridge was totally empty, so I just had to go out to the store. It was a warm summer night, humidity that late at night, there Was nobody out on the streets. There was no traffic. You could see all the stars. I decided to take a shortcut through the neighborhood. Down this little trail that goes through the woods and over a bridge. So Bastet followed me out the door and onto the porch. But then she hesitated at the steps at the top of the porch. After a little bit of hesitation, she followed me. But she wouldn't go past the corner. She stayed on the corner and meowed at me, which was very odd. I thought, okay, she just wants attention. I'll make sure to pet her a bunch when I get back. So I left her and continued my walk as soon as I got out of her line of sight. And then a cat came out from my neighbor's yard. It was one that I recognized. Gus was a very elderly tabby. You know how some cats, when they get old, they don't exactly get chubby, but they sort of sag. That was Gus. He was like this old saggy cat. He followed me for a little ways. He never followed me like that before. Before I got to another corner and he stayed at the corner. But then as soon as I got out of his line of sight, another cat popped out and this kept happening. They were cats that I recognized, but they weren't always cats that I was really friendly with. Like, some of them weren't cats that normally would come right up to me or follow me around. I was kind of thinking like, oh man, what is going on? Like, what's gotten into them? Like, did I leave catnip in my pocket or something As I was walking at one point, this pair of black cats comes out of the bushes and just flanks me, one on each side. It was Mr. Squibs and his brother, Scruffy. Mr. Squibs was a velvety black cat with big golden eyes. Scruffy looked exactly like Mr. Squibs, except less well groomed. They weren't trying to get my attention. They clearly weren't interested in getting anything from me. Treats or pets or anything like that. They were just walking with me. They were looking around, mostly ahead, off to the side. The whole time I was walking down that block. It was unnerving to. It sort of set off alarm bells in my head. Once or twice was normal, three times was odd. But by the time the fifth cat had come up and followed me, I was like, all right, this is. This is definitely strange. By the time I got at the trailhead, it'd only been maybe 15 minute walk. I saw a cat there that I didn't recognize sitting right at the entrance, in front of that concrete post, Almost like he was waiting for somebody. He was fluffy and this sort of pale, creamy orange, Kind of like a creamsicle. I knew I had never seen a cat like that in the neighborhood. As I got up close to him, he came up to me and let me scratch his ears and rubbed around my legs. As I started walking down this trail, he kept winding around my feet. You know how cats do when they're. When they really want attention. Like, you can't take a step without this cat running in front of your foot. That's what he was doing. I could hardly walk forward at all. Tried scratching his face, and he didn't really seem to. To care about that. He was in front of me. He was underfoot. Every time I took a step, it just got more intense the further I went. I started to get kind of wigged out. I told myself at first, it's just the cat being very affectionate. He just wants attention. Cats do this all the time. But I couldn't shake this feeling of unease. As I got closer to the bottom of the trail, where there's that bend, I thought, well, if this cat really is trying to get me to stop, all I have to do is turn around and walk the other way. So I turned around and I started walking back uphill. But the second I turned around, he stopped. He just tagged along right behind me, like a dog at heel, almost. He didn't get in the way once. I thought, okay, this is. This is really strange. The cat was herding me back up the trail. I thought, well, I want my orange juice, but I can wait. So I went all the way back up the trail, and he didn't let me out of sight. When I got to the trailhead, he just sat there watching me as I walked away, Just like he had when I'd approached in the first place. The whole way home, every time I turned a corner, cats would come out and follow me and walk alongside me. Mr. Squibs. Scruffy Gus. As I got back close to home and I turned the corner, I saw Bastet was waiting. She hadn't even sat down. She was standing there staring in my direction like she'd been watching the whole time for me to come back. She ran straight up to me and wouldn't leave my side. She followed me right back into the house, and I latched the door behind me. I was like, this is ridiculous. I got scared by a friendly cat. What is wrong with me? Several months later, school started back up again. I was sitting in the study lounge area of the library with some classmates. One of my classmates happened to mention that she'd heard there was a stabbing, that a girl had been attacked while she was out walking at night on the trail at the bottom of the footpath. I thought, oh, my gosh, I walk that way all the time. She said, it happened in July at night. And I remember this weird night with the cats. That was the only time I'd been out walking that way that late over the summer. It had to have happened that night. It was hair raising, chilling to think about, would I have been the one to cross that bridge? And then I realized the cats were trying to herd me away from danger. I think that there was somebody waiting who had bad intentions. They were looking out for me. Dogs adore you. You meet a Labrador, it's going to be your best friend no matter who you are. Cats, they're not going to care about somebody they don't have a relationship with. When you meet a cat, you have to prove yourself to it. They can tell when somebody looks out for them and they return that favor. I've never seen that big fluffy orange cat again. But if I ever did, I would give him a scratch in the ears and a big can of tuna.
Glenn Washington
Laurel, we are so glad you're okay and so glad you listened to what the furries had to tell you. That piece, it was scored by Sandra Lawson Endu. It was produced by Anne Ford. Now, Spooksters, please, please, please. If you have a story that you think the world needs to hear, please send it our way. Spookednapjudgment.org because there is nothing better than a spooked story from a spooked listener. Spooked Studios lies hidden below pools of magic mystery deep underneath KQD in San Francisco. Don't seek to find it, lest it seeks to find you. We've got the special incantation for Spooklegood that says no SNAP Studios content would be used for training, testing or developing machine learning or AI systems without prior written permission. On Team Spooked, the union represented producers, artists, editors and engineers, members of the national association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians, Communications organ of America, AFL CIO Local 51. And Spoot is brought to you by the team that also has nine lives. Of course, for Mark Ristich, he's on borrowed time. There's Davy Kim, Zoe Frigno, Eric Yanez, Elliot Lightfoot, Marissa Dodge, Miles Lassie, Teo Dicott, Regina Beniaco, Paulina Creaky, Elizabeth Z. Pardue, Pithy Amatu Lulu Jemima Doug Stewart Nicholas Marks the Spook theme song is by Pat Mesiti Miller My name is Glenn Washington. At the beginning of this episode, I told you about Lake Sanford and the destruction of Sanford, Michigan. Over 2,500 homes and businesses laid waste or damaged. An entire community deluged because of a quirk of geology. After the stormwaters rose, they retreated. When for the first time in living memory, people saw the bottom of our lake. With prehistoric looking gray skeletal tree trunks that hadn't seen daylight in generations snatched back into the open air. And folk went looking for secrets finally revealed. In fact, some, when searching for monsters, thought maybe to discover clues about Michigan's most infamous creature. The Michigan Dogman. Half man with a canine face set to run the very area of the flood zone. Others tried to discover the mysterious water lights that have confounded travelers for generations. So others set search for shadow figures set to roam the river bank. Quests, journeys and distractions to save people from the shock of that wall of water. Because it took time, it took space to realize that Sanford was built on a lie. That there had basically been no maintenance on the dam since the carnival. Parker Frank Isaac was wixom, set the place up as a real estate scheme a full century ago. And the people charged with running the dam that held back the waters, the people charged with protecting the town, they knew full well it was just a matter of time. But maybe, maybe if they waited long enough, it'd be somebody else's problem. The Dogman didn't destroy Sanford. Our mysterious and beloved water lights had nothing to do with it. Bigfoot is innocent. Nah. A greater evil destroyed Eden. Greed. I have met the monster. And always, always, it is us. Never ever, never ever turn out the lights.
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Podcast: Spooked
Host: Glynn Washington
Episode Release: March 20, 2026
Duration: ~46 minutes (excluding ads)
Publisher: KQED and Snap Studios
In this chilling episode, “The Guardians,” Spooked dives into the mysterious figures—both spectral and feline—that seem to intervene at just the right moment. Two immersive stories are told: Elise recounts a near-fatal accident at Georgia’s infamous Lake Lanier and her encounter with a life-saving “lady in blue”; Laurel, a college student, is guided away from danger by an inexplicable feline procession. Weaving personal memory, folklore, and a search for explanation, the episode explores the line between guardian angels, ghosts, and the subtle ways the universe (or something beyond) might keep us from harm.
[02:53-05:45, 41:03-45:33]
[08:06-26:12]
[30:09-41:03]
| Time | Segment/Story | |---------|----------------------------------------------| | 02:53 | Glynn’s childhood at Sanford Lake | | 05:46 | Transition to Elise’s story | | 08:06 | Elise sets the scene: Lake Lanier | | 15:18 | The jet ski accident and Lady in Blue appears| | 19:24 | Hospital aftermath and parental reaction | | 21:30 | Elise discovers the Lady of the Lake legend | | 25:42 | Elise’s reflection on her ghostly guardian | | 30:09 | Introduction to Laurel’s story | | 31:19 | Laurel’s relationship with cats | | 34:00 | The procession of cats intensifies | | 37:10 | Laurel is steered away by the cats | | 39:49 | Discovery of the stabbing and realization | | 41:03 | Glynn’s closing reflections: truth behind Sanford’s destruction |
The episode combines first-person storytelling, atmospheric sound design, and Glynn Washington’s poetic, measured narration. True to Spooked’s ethos, the stories are delivered in the authentic voices of the tellers—full of awe, vulnerability, and gratitude for their unexplained deliverance. The tone is suspenseful, reflective, and occasionally chilling, with a sense of wonder rather than dogmatic belief.
Glynn encourages listeners: “If you have a story that you think the world needs to hear, please send it our way. Spookednapjudgment.org because there is nothing better than a spooked story from a spooked listener.” ([41:10])