She Was Planning a Threesome The Night She Died
In 1970, when Janis Joplin tragically shuffled off this mortal coil, her heart was entwined with two lovers: her betrothed, Seth Morgan, and the enigmatic Peggy Caserta, whose relationship with Joplin was a passionate rollercoaster ride. Janis was a magnet for male attention, but her liaison with Caserta had a deeper, more enduring essence, hinting at a profound love story. Heartbreakingly, on the night Janis took her final bow, both Caserta and Morgan were conspicuously absent from their rendezvous.

In a daring rendezvous, Joplin had orchestrated a ménage à trois with Morgan and Caserta. When they failed to materialize, she pressed on with an unyielding spirit. Tragically, it was this fateful night that she succumbed to an overdose. The tantalizing “what ifs” of that evening linger in the ether. Regardless, Joplin’s audacious choice to love freely, irrespective of gender, reverberates profoundly in our modern world, a vibrant echo of her indomitable spirit.