Dopey 557: CLASSIC DOPEY! Pimps and Ho's, Meth and Heroin, Crack! Smuggling people in the Trunk with Glynis!
Update: 2025-11-14
Description
NOTES:
Dave opens the show with his usual Dopey ramble, talking about meditation apps, gratitude, and reading a mountain of Spotify comments — some sweet, some insane, some hostile.
He riffs on Dopey Nation characters and gives reactions to listener feedback.
Voicemails and emails roll in, including Taylor discussing kratom and 7-OH, plus various listener stories Dave comments on.
Dave moves through multiple sponsor transitions and personal anecdotes before introducing the guest: Glynis Frantz.
Glynis Interview — Part 1
Glynis describes wanting to be “a nice girl” — a good daughter, sister, aunt — but feeling pulled by a “magnet” toward using.
She explains her deep resentment toward her mother; abandonment issues that spilled into relationships; her belief she was unlovable; and recreating rejection in every relationship.
Talks about falling into addiction as the only relief she ever knew.
Early years of crack, heroin, Oxy, running from DYS, juvenile detention, being arrested, and eventually a pattern of heroin dealing and using as a teenager.
Stripping in Providence; OCs and crack with older men; trauma piling up.
Boston → Texas → Early Meth
She reunites with a “normal” boyfriend in Texas, tries to stay clean, fails.
Describes being cold, homeless, couch-to-couch in Boston, occasionally sleeping outside.
Returns to Texas, tries bartending, gets introduced to “ice” (crystal meth).
Enters meth culture — 4-day runs, disappearing with the car, compulsively reorganizing the trunk for six hours.
Her boyfriend tries to help but becomes a hostage to the chaos.
Game Rooms, GHB, & Meth Culture
Glynis explains underground “game rooms” in Texas — illegal casino rooms tied to meth culture.
Meth → crack binges → GHB to come down → more meth.
She describes tweakers, matches, pushing buttons on illegal slot machines, and disappearing for days.
Eventually begins mixing meth and heroin again (shooting tar for the first time).
The Robberies & Falling Apart
Cars stolen multiple times.
A woman she met in jail robs her boyfriend’s entire house — “not a charger left in the socket.”
Police involvement, panic, and the boyfriend finally ending the relationship after trying to help for too long.
Strip Clubs → Money Mike → Pimp/Hoe Life
Glynis returns to dancing and meets Money Mike, a career pimp freshly out of federal prison for pimping/pandering.
She breaks down pimp culture:
Bottom bitch / golden goose / ducks
No eye contact with certain men
Recruiting “fresh turnouts”
Rules: never fall asleep, never give away free time, never “simp”
Glynis talks about the psychological grip — incremental loss of autonomy, fear tactics, and the twisted family dynamic.
She details abscesses, ICU stays, neck shots, and disconnecting from her body emotionally.
Renegade Mode & Meth Psychosis
Glynis eventually escapes, steals back her own life, becomes a “renegade” (independent escort).
Meth psychosis intensifies — hypervigilance, believing she’s being hunted by pimps, calling police on herself multiple times.
A horrifying stretch of paranoia, hallucinations, and fleeing state to state.
L.A., Skid Row, Gang Members, & Fentanyl
Moves to L.A., loses phone/ID, ends up staying in a trap motel with a homeless meth user named Naji.
Starts buying drugs in MacArthur Park and Skid Row.
Gets absorbed into gang environments: stolen cars, guns, indictments, being handcuffed to a sink.
Moves to Vegas briefly to escape.
Returns to L.A. and begins buying ounces, then pounds of fentanyl.
Human Smuggling Across the Border
Gets recruited by a cartel-adjacent crew to drive undocumented people across the border from Mexico into the U.S.
Describes the process:
Hotel meet-ups
Bluetooth instructions
Losing cell service near the pickup
People running out of bushes into her trunk
Driving through checkpoints
Usually 2–3 people per run; $1,500 per head if local drop, more if delivered to L.A.
Eventually makes the mistake of putting someone in the passenger seat.
Bust → Federal Prison → Cross-Eyed Withdrawal
Border checkpoint sends her to secondary.
She is arrested and taken to Pine Valley Border Patrol Station.
Withdraws violently from fentanyl in custody.
Falls from top bunk, hits her head, has a seizure, becomes cross-eyed for months.
Hospitalized two weeks under U.S. Marshals while they rule out neurological disease.
Moves through multiple federal facilities (MCC, Otay Mesa, Santa Ana, Pahrump).
Makes pruno, sees drugs smuggled into prison, survives COVID lockdown.
Early Release → Recovery
COVID triggers major prison movement shutdowns, then early release for nonviolent offenders.
Placed in a chaotic men’s sober living where only one person is actually sober: Jimmy the Poet.
Exhausted, scared, with the first desire for freedom she’s ever had, she recognizes that drinking would send her straight back to prison.
Asks for help.
Connects with a sober woman; begins attending 12-step meetings; starts the process of building an actual life.
Outro
Glynis reflects on believing she was irreparably broken, unlovable, and incapable of a real life.
She talks about becoming a sober woman with a career, meaningful relationships, sponsees, and a husband.
Dave praises her as a chameleon who survived countless worlds and now uses the same adaptability for good.
Both joke about “Boston” as a street name, and Dave thanks her for the rawest storytelling.
Dave opens the show with his usual Dopey ramble, talking about meditation apps, gratitude, and reading a mountain of Spotify comments — some sweet, some insane, some hostile.
He riffs on Dopey Nation characters and gives reactions to listener feedback.
Voicemails and emails roll in, including Taylor discussing kratom and 7-OH, plus various listener stories Dave comments on.
Dave moves through multiple sponsor transitions and personal anecdotes before introducing the guest: Glynis Frantz.
Glynis Interview — Part 1
Glynis describes wanting to be “a nice girl” — a good daughter, sister, aunt — but feeling pulled by a “magnet” toward using.
She explains her deep resentment toward her mother; abandonment issues that spilled into relationships; her belief she was unlovable; and recreating rejection in every relationship.
Talks about falling into addiction as the only relief she ever knew.
Early years of crack, heroin, Oxy, running from DYS, juvenile detention, being arrested, and eventually a pattern of heroin dealing and using as a teenager.
Stripping in Providence; OCs and crack with older men; trauma piling up.
Boston → Texas → Early Meth
She reunites with a “normal” boyfriend in Texas, tries to stay clean, fails.
Describes being cold, homeless, couch-to-couch in Boston, occasionally sleeping outside.
Returns to Texas, tries bartending, gets introduced to “ice” (crystal meth).
Enters meth culture — 4-day runs, disappearing with the car, compulsively reorganizing the trunk for six hours.
Her boyfriend tries to help but becomes a hostage to the chaos.
Game Rooms, GHB, & Meth Culture
Glynis explains underground “game rooms” in Texas — illegal casino rooms tied to meth culture.
Meth → crack binges → GHB to come down → more meth.
She describes tweakers, matches, pushing buttons on illegal slot machines, and disappearing for days.
Eventually begins mixing meth and heroin again (shooting tar for the first time).
The Robberies & Falling Apart
Cars stolen multiple times.
A woman she met in jail robs her boyfriend’s entire house — “not a charger left in the socket.”
Police involvement, panic, and the boyfriend finally ending the relationship after trying to help for too long.
Strip Clubs → Money Mike → Pimp/Hoe Life
Glynis returns to dancing and meets Money Mike, a career pimp freshly out of federal prison for pimping/pandering.
She breaks down pimp culture:
Bottom bitch / golden goose / ducks
No eye contact with certain men
Recruiting “fresh turnouts”
Rules: never fall asleep, never give away free time, never “simp”
Glynis talks about the psychological grip — incremental loss of autonomy, fear tactics, and the twisted family dynamic.
She details abscesses, ICU stays, neck shots, and disconnecting from her body emotionally.
Renegade Mode & Meth Psychosis
Glynis eventually escapes, steals back her own life, becomes a “renegade” (independent escort).
Meth psychosis intensifies — hypervigilance, believing she’s being hunted by pimps, calling police on herself multiple times.
A horrifying stretch of paranoia, hallucinations, and fleeing state to state.
L.A., Skid Row, Gang Members, & Fentanyl
Moves to L.A., loses phone/ID, ends up staying in a trap motel with a homeless meth user named Naji.
Starts buying drugs in MacArthur Park and Skid Row.
Gets absorbed into gang environments: stolen cars, guns, indictments, being handcuffed to a sink.
Moves to Vegas briefly to escape.
Returns to L.A. and begins buying ounces, then pounds of fentanyl.
Human Smuggling Across the Border
Gets recruited by a cartel-adjacent crew to drive undocumented people across the border from Mexico into the U.S.
Describes the process:
Hotel meet-ups
Bluetooth instructions
Losing cell service near the pickup
People running out of bushes into her trunk
Driving through checkpoints
Usually 2–3 people per run; $1,500 per head if local drop, more if delivered to L.A.
Eventually makes the mistake of putting someone in the passenger seat.
Bust → Federal Prison → Cross-Eyed Withdrawal
Border checkpoint sends her to secondary.
She is arrested and taken to Pine Valley Border Patrol Station.
Withdraws violently from fentanyl in custody.
Falls from top bunk, hits her head, has a seizure, becomes cross-eyed for months.
Hospitalized two weeks under U.S. Marshals while they rule out neurological disease.
Moves through multiple federal facilities (MCC, Otay Mesa, Santa Ana, Pahrump).
Makes pruno, sees drugs smuggled into prison, survives COVID lockdown.
Early Release → Recovery
COVID triggers major prison movement shutdowns, then early release for nonviolent offenders.
Placed in a chaotic men’s sober living where only one person is actually sober: Jimmy the Poet.
Exhausted, scared, with the first desire for freedom she’s ever had, she recognizes that drinking would send her straight back to prison.
Asks for help.
Connects with a sober woman; begins attending 12-step meetings; starts the process of building an actual life.
Outro
Glynis reflects on believing she was irreparably broken, unlovable, and incapable of a real life.
She talks about becoming a sober woman with a career, meaningful relationships, sponsees, and a husband.
Dave praises her as a chameleon who survived countless worlds and now uses the same adaptability for good.
Both joke about “Boston” as a street name, and Dave thanks her for the rawest storytelling.
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