A New Chapter for S-Town Fans
Saturday is the inaugural Woodstock Music Festival in Woodstock, Alabama, just southwest of Birmingham. The town shares its name with the iconic 1969 music festival. But it’s gained notoriety for a different reason.
It’s the setting for the popular podcast “S-Town.”
One resident has found ways for fans of the podcast to connect with the Alabama town, the fruits of which will be on display this weekend.
The past few weeks, Cheryl Dodson says looking through the mail is like Christmas. On a recent evening she opens an envelope from London. Inside is a decorative tag. It’s a brown rectangle with two corners cut off, like you might see tied to a fancy gift. On this tag, the sender has drawn clocks.
“Your story stuck with me John B. McLemore,” Dodson reads from the note. “Miss you and wish you could have stay to continue it. Sending love. Nelly in Hackney, London.”
John B. McLemore is the eccentric central character of S-Town. And spoiler alert: he commits suicide. The podcast was widely acclaimed but left some resident unsettled. After all, the name, S-Town, is taken from McLemore’s vulgar nickname for Woodstock.
Dodson says some people in town still won’t listen to it because of the name. And it was tough in the weeks after the podcast came out.
“You really felt under the microscope and you didn’t know what people thought,” says Dodson.
Dodson is married to Woodstock’s mayor and she makes a brief appearance in the podcast. She says people who were touched by McLemore’s story began reaching out to her and her husband. A seven-part podcast wasn’t enough.
“I think everybody was starving for chapter eight,” says Dodson. “The things we’ve done has allowed fans to interact with us.”
One of those things is this tag project. Dodson developed it with an S-Town fan who was an art teacher. She promoted it on social media. She also sent tags to those who contacted her. The idea being that people inspired by the podcast would decorate the tags and send them back. Each tag she received is then tied to a gate that will be on display at the music festival.

She says she’s already received tags from 28 states and five countries. She’s expecting tags from an AP English class in Louisiana. Some local residents took part too.


But this is more than an art project for Cheryl Dodson. It’s part of an effort to raise awareness of depression and suicide. She points out Alabama and Bibb County, where Woodstock is, have suicide rates higher than the national average. She says it’s clear from the letters she’s received that the issue touches many people.
“Oh, my mom is a John. Oh, I lost my brother. Oh, my friend is a John. He don’t admit it. Now that is always funny. Nobody admits they’re John, but they all admit they know a John,” says Dodson.
Dodson doesn’t want this to end with Saturday’s festival and hopes the gate can go on display in the library or town hall.
And she’s about to make good on another idea spawned by the podcast. She and John B. McLemore loved flowers. So “S-Town” fans have been mailing her wildflower seeds. When the weather’s right, Dodson intends to plant them around Woodstock.
“I think we’ve got something where we can go, ‘Look what we’ve done,'” says Dodson. “We’ve got something that is beautiful that’s come out of it.”
Dozens of states sue to block the sale of 23andMe personal genetic data
States argue that biological samples, DNA data, health-related traits and medical records are too sensitive to be sold without each person's express, informed consent.
Smithsonian board to keep institution ‘free from political or partisan influence’
The Smithsonian has issued a statement supporting Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch following President Trump's claim that he fired the director of the National Portrait Gallery.
Drug deaths plummet among young Americans as fentanyl carnage eases
U.S. drug deaths dropped by roughly 40% last year among people under the age of 35. It's a welcome pivot for families and communities devastated by fentanyl.
Witness testifies about Sean Combs’ ‘hotel nights’: ‘I was repulsed’
The woman, who dated Combs, testified that she repeatedly told him she did not want to participate in the drug-fueled encounters with escorts he requested, but felt pressured to comply.
What happened when Lyndon Johnson federalized the National Guard
President Lyndon B. Johnson federalized the National Guard in 1965, calling on troops to protect civil rights advocates who were marching from Selma, Ala., to Montgomery.
Trump mobilizes Marines for duty in Los Angeles
U.S. Northern Command says the infantry battalion would be supporting the National Guard troops "who are protecting federal personnel and federal property in the greater Los Angeles area."