Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did McKenzies parents give her phone to the cops?
Free-floating stupidity.
Anonymous wrote:According to his father Davion (RIP), was on track to play college football until he had an injury early senior year that meant that was no longer possible. He would have enrolled in barber school instead had he not died.
I am not familiar with that world but couldn’t he have done to college anyway if he had the grades? Is getting recruited for a sport usually such a deal breaker between four year college and barber school? That seems an unnecessarily stark college landscape for a foster/adoption kid.
Anonymous wrote:Why did McKenzies parents give her phone to the cops?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep seeing people describe Strongsville as an “upper middle class” community but based on the documentary it seems much more downscale? 17 year olds living with boyfriends, none of these kids heading to college? Is Ohio UMC really that different from DMV UMC?
...Were you expecting a Cleveland suburb to be chock full of Ivy-educated biglaw partners?
No but as another PP says, there are Cleveland suburbs where the parents are doctors, accountants, etc. and the kids are largely college-bound. These kids were going nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:Killer Cases on Hulu, last episode of season 8 has this story if want more
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did McKenzies parents give her phone to the cops?
Probably a generation gap underestimating just how much incriminating information from social media and texts there are on modern cell phones. The parents look about gen x. They had Zack Morris like brick sized phones that only made phone calls when they were teenagers. They likely thought nothing of handing her phone to the cops, not realising the bong TikTok’s and arguments with Dom over text gave the prosecution all the amo they needed.
Anonymous wrote:Why did McKenzies parents give her phone to the cops?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep seeing people describe Strongsville as an “upper middle class” community but based on the documentary it seems much more downscale? 17 year olds living with boyfriends, none of these kids heading to college? Is Ohio UMC really that different from DMV UMC?
...Were you expecting a Cleveland suburb to be chock full of Ivy-educated biglaw partners?
No but as another PP says, there are Cleveland suburbs where the parents are doctors, accountants, etc. and the kids are largely college-bound. These kids were going nowhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep seeing people describe Strongsville as an “upper middle class” community but based on the documentary it seems much more downscale? 17 year olds living with boyfriends, none of these kids heading to college? Is Ohio UMC really that different from DMV UMC?
...Were you expecting a Cleveland suburb to be chock full of Ivy-educated biglaw partners?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep seeing people describe Strongsville as an “upper middle class” community but based on the documentary it seems much more downscale? 17 year olds living with boyfriends, none of these kids heading to college? Is Ohio UMC really that different from DMV UMC?
...Were you expecting a Cleveland suburb to be chock full of Ivy-educated biglaw partners?
Anonymous wrote:I keep seeing people describe Strongsville as an “upper middle class” community but based on the documentary it seems much more downscale? 17 year olds living with boyfriends, none of these kids heading to college? Is Ohio UMC really that different from DMV UMC?