Danny found a baby in the subway by What Was That Like
Follow What Was That Like on iHeartRadio - https://ihr.fm/3fUwb4s
Follow on Apple Podcasts - https://apple.co/3ROy1kT Follow
everywhere else - https://bit.ly/3fV3G6T The subway system in New
York City is pretty impressive. It opened in 1904 so it’s...
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The best cases, crimes, and unsolved mysteries by a different independent podcast creator every week. Subscribe for True Crime variety or to find your next favorite podcast to binge. True Crime by Indie Drop-In network is an essential podcast for...
Beschreibung
vor 3 Jahren
Follow What Was That Like on iHeartRadio -
https://ihr.fm/3fUwb4s
Follow on Apple Podcasts - https://apple.co/3ROy1kT
Follow everywhere else - https://bit.ly/3fV3G6T
The subway system in New York City is pretty impressive.
It opened in 1904 so it’s one of the oldest subway systems in the
world. And it is definitely the largest, with 472 stations. And
throughout its history, the subway has offered service 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week almost continuously. The exceptions are usually
emergencies and disasters, such as 9/11.
You want to take a guess as to how many people ride the subway, on
an average weekday? Go ahead, think of a number. Okay, it’s 5.6
million people. Per day!
The subway system can be a little scary sometimes, but most of the
time it’s safe. It’s just a large crowd of individual people, each
one needing to get from one location to another location. Many of
them will have ear buds in, or be engrossed in a book or newspaper,
mostly unaware of what’s going on around them.
What you’re gonna hear today is my conversation with Danny. Back
when this happened, he lived in New York City with his partner,
Pete. In fact, they still live there.
Danny was one of those people on the subway. Head down, in a hurry
because he was running late, just wanted to get off the train and
up to the street.
But on this day, he happened to notice something on the floor near
the stairs.
It was a baby.
~~~~~~~~~~~
Indie Drop-In
All content legally licensed from the original creator.
Thank you to What Was That Like for the great episode.
You can find Indie Drop-In at https://indiedropin.com
Help Indie Drop-In support indie creators by buying us a
coffee!
https://buymeacoffee.com/indiedropin
Brands can advertise on Indie Drop-In using Patreon
https://patreon.com/indiedropin
Twitter: https://twitter.com/indiedropin
Instagram: https://instagram.com/indiedropin
Facebook: https://facebook.com/indiedropin
Any advertising found in this episode is inserted by Indie Drop-In
and not endorsed by the Creator.
If you would like to have your show featured go to
http://indiedropin.com/creators
~~~~~~~~~~~
https://ihr.fm/3fUwb4s
Follow on Apple Podcasts - https://apple.co/3ROy1kT
Follow everywhere else - https://bit.ly/3fV3G6T
The subway system in New York City is pretty impressive.
It opened in 1904 so it’s one of the oldest subway systems in the
world. And it is definitely the largest, with 472 stations. And
throughout its history, the subway has offered service 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week almost continuously. The exceptions are usually
emergencies and disasters, such as 9/11.
You want to take a guess as to how many people ride the subway, on
an average weekday? Go ahead, think of a number. Okay, it’s 5.6
million people. Per day!
The subway system can be a little scary sometimes, but most of the
time it’s safe. It’s just a large crowd of individual people, each
one needing to get from one location to another location. Many of
them will have ear buds in, or be engrossed in a book or newspaper,
mostly unaware of what’s going on around them.
What you’re gonna hear today is my conversation with Danny. Back
when this happened, he lived in New York City with his partner,
Pete. In fact, they still live there.
Danny was one of those people on the subway. Head down, in a hurry
because he was running late, just wanted to get off the train and
up to the street.
But on this day, he happened to notice something on the floor near
the stairs.
It was a baby.
~~~~~~~~~~~
Indie Drop-In
All content legally licensed from the original creator.
Thank you to What Was That Like for the great episode.
You can find Indie Drop-In at https://indiedropin.com
Help Indie Drop-In support indie creators by buying us a
coffee!
https://buymeacoffee.com/indiedropin
Brands can advertise on Indie Drop-In using Patreon
https://patreon.com/indiedropin
Twitter: https://twitter.com/indiedropin
Instagram: https://instagram.com/indiedropin
Facebook: https://facebook.com/indiedropin
Any advertising found in this episode is inserted by Indie Drop-In
and not endorsed by the Creator.
If you would like to have your show featured go to
http://indiedropin.com/creators
~~~~~~~~~~~
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