Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
April 6, 2009
>As some of you may know, the veracity of my new cocktail party story has been called into question. Apparently, Snopes claims it is false. But I know it’s true. Of course it’s true! I mean, why would my stepdaughter’s friend’s friend’s father lie?
However, writing that tale reminded me that I don’t even need to tell cocktail party stories about other people, not when I have more than a few good ones that happened to me. I mean, if I got anything out of being a television reporter, it was cocktail party stories. So pretend we just met and I’m trying to liven up a party. Okay, ready?
Did you know that I can examine a bag of cremated remains and determine whether or not they’re human? Oh yes I can!
(At this point, half of the people listening to my cocktail party story turn away in search of someone else to chat with.)
What? You’re still here? Okay, I’ll keep going!
One day several years ago, I was sitting at my desk in the newsroom, when I got an e-mail from a funeral home director.
It was about a big national news story that had taken place in Georgia. You probably remember it. Some guy was running a crematory in a rural area, a crematory that serviced funeral homes in a few different states. Apparently, at some point his oven “had issues,” so he just started piling bodies anywhere he could find a decent hiding spot and sending concrete dust in bags back to the funeral homes. He managed to pile up several hundred bodies over a long period of time before anyone discovered what was going on.
Eeeeeeyuck.
Anyway, the guy who sent me the e-mail (we’ll call him Kenny), had just bought his funeral home from a man who had used the questionable crematory in the past. As a result, Kenny wrote that all kinds of people were showing up at his door with their urns, wanting him to tell them whether they had grandma on their mantel or concrete dust. Kenny himself had never used that crematory. Essentially, he inherited the problem from his funeral home’s former owner. It was, as you can imagine, a nightmare.
And with that, a huge national story became local… and no one in town knew about it but me. I called Kenny on the phone, spoke with him for a few minutes, grabbed a photographer and headed for the funeral home, which was about an hour and a half away.
When we got there, we met Kenny and his family. Kenny had to have been the nicest funeral home director in the whole world. He was a young dad with a sweet wife and small children (they lived on the property, so I got to meet everyone), and they had put everything they had into buying the business. While we were chatting in his office, several more people stopped by with their urns. Kenny couldn’t have been kinder or more concerned, carefully examining each set of remains to make sure they were human, and taking everyone’s information so that he could let them know of any developments.
I couldn’t get over the openness of the people in Kenny’s small town. Pretty much everyone who came to the funeral home was more than willing to talk to me on camera about their plight.
“I just can’t believe that this might not be Aunt Sue/Cousin Bill/Great Grandma Woogie at all,” they’d say, balancing urns on their hip or holding them awkwardly out in front of them while the camera rolled.
Kenny also was very helpful.
“Here,” he said at one point, handing me a heavy, clear plastic bag filled with ash. “You can tell this ash is human because of the bits of bone in there. Do you see them? And you can tell by the color of the ash, and the weight. See all those colors? The concrete dust ones are just gray, and weigh practically nothing.”
Teaching a reporter to identify human cremains? That is called going the extra mile, people!
At the end of the day, I did a live shot from Kenny’s town for the six-o-clock news. I had the exclusive on local victims in the story that had topped network news that night. Local! Victims! I could almost hear the gnashing of teeth at the competing television stations in Nashville.
As my photographer and I headed back to Nashville that night, we got a phone call from Kenny’s wife.
“All kinds of reporters are calling here now, wanting interviews,” she said. “I don’t know that I feel comfortable with that.”
“That’s got to be annoying,” I said sympathetically. “They don’t know anything about y’all.” Generally, I wasn’t one of those reporters who tried to keep my “sources” from talking to other stations. But in this case, I had spent my entire day with Kenny and his family. We had established a bond and I was feeling protective. No one could possibly do this story justice but me. So when Kenny’s wife sounded like they wanted to limit their media interviews to me and me alone?
Um. Yeah!
“Look,” she said, after we talked for a few minutes. “We’re not going to answer the phone for the rest of the night. Tomorrow morning, Kenny will leave here for Georgia at 7:30. Can you be here by then?”
“Absolutely,” I said.
And that’s how Hide the Kenny began.
To be continued….
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>I can’t wait to hear the rest! Love it when you leave me hanging. I do remember the story…um, yuck.Had a good conversation about you the other night. My friend Cheryl got to talk with you while her friend Irene was doing an interview. I teased that I was green with envy! Thanks for the comments on my page…I think that my kid is kind of cute too! 🙂 Yours are adorable!
>Hmmm. Your numerous responses are overwhelming me. Would it help if I called Kenny “Bono?”
>ohmygracious. i remember that story. how kind of him to let you in on how to see if cremains are human rather than moving the piles of dead bodies left behind?? seriously that is one whacked story.i can’t wait to hear how that turned out.or to use this at a cocktail party in the future, you know, like i know this girl…and the people who walk away?? what are they looking for?? a conversation about how long their broccoli stays fresh in the fridge in tupperware??(a very long time, i’m here to tell ya) bbut that’s another cocktail party alltogether.
>Dude … bono runs a funeral home?!?!? I knew he was phoning it in on that last U2 record. Clearly his passion is elsewhere. Kenny sounds like a mensch. And if people at cocktail parties run away when you tell this story, you’re at the wrong parties. While we’re on that, are you telling me as the mother of small children you still go to cocktail parties? That may be the only part of this story I can’t swallow.
>Well, I have two teenage stepdaughters who always need money. Babysitting is almost never a problem.
>I love your blog and this story! I can’t wait for the rest! Soo funny, and hopefully a skill you won’t need to use too often!
>Beyond strange. Can’t wait to hear the rest of the story. I feel like I am right there with you.
>There’s a book by Dr. William Bass (the TN body farm guy) about this exact scenario (author Jefferson Bass since he teams up with another writer) – the Devil’s Bones.Have you met Dr. Bass? I assume he consulted on this case?
>I have no idea. I wasn’t at the station during the court trial part of this story.
>Of all the things I thought I’d be reading today, identifying human remains didn’t top or even bottom the list….and I can’t wait to get the rest of the story! 🙂
>love it! it made me sad, though, too. i remember seeing the bones in my dad’s ashes and how freaky it was that ashes and a few bone fragments were all that was left. my dad was 40, and i was 17. we sprinkled them over Lake Washington, and now i wish he had a grave stone, or something. anyway. as always, i love the cliffhangers….
>Ah, bummer. My first thought was that you could somehow distinguish the cremains of humans versus say, cats or dogs. Just by looking? THAT would be talent, lol.
>You know? I think I could.
>I’m submitting your story to Snopes for verification.
>I never heard about the guy with the broken furnace. Um. GROSS.
>Looking forward to the rest of the story!You commented on my blog this morning and I felt like a celebrity had read my wee little blog. I was very excited.
>Interesting…cremains and cocktail parties. I hope as the story unfolds, you’ll answer one question I have (which I actually sprung on a funeral home director in ’06, trying to wring a light moment from a dark journey):At funeral home parties, do they serve cadaviar?*ducking boos and urns*
>I’ve checked back three times today! When’s Chapter Two coming??? 🙂
>Ha ha! Sorry. I’ve got a noon deadline today on my column, so it’ll probably be up some time late this afternoon . 🙂
>I can’t WAIT to hear the rest of the story. And when I get home, I’m going to check and make sure Grandma is all good in her urn on the mantel. Just kidding. That would be a little spooky.
>I love your work stories! You stopped writing them at Parents.com. I’d love to see them continued here!!!
>This is great! I’m totally behind on my blog reading and it worked in my favor ‘cuz now I can read both parts together 🙂