SmartLess - Wondery Presents: This Job is History
Episode Date: December 27, 2022Where the oddest jobs from the past meet a comedian from the present… and it’s awkward! On this weekly show, Chris Parnell (SNL, Rick and Morty) welcomes guests who have held some of... human history’s most unexpected and downright bizarre jobs: funeral clowns, garden hermits, VHS clerks, and everything in between. With the help of his tireless producer, Chris hears from the essential workers from decades and centuries past. Because before there were actual medical doctors, there were barber surgeons. And before there was Instacart, there were milkmen. Wondery’s This Job Is History is a funny, absurd, and informative look into how time can change the way we live and work.Listen to This Job is History: wondery.fm/Smartless_TJIHSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Do you think your job stinks?
Just wait until you hear what it was like
to be a funeral clown.
Long before all of human knowledge was in your pocket,
people had some pretty bizarre professions.
Luckily, you don't have to come in contact
with a sin eater or a barber surgeon now,
but you're about to find out what it's like
to get surgery with an afternoon shave.
Wondery's new podcast, This Job is History,
is hosted by Chris Parnell from Saturday Night Live
and Rick and Morty.
Steeped in factual history,
this brilliantly funny podcast delves into quirky
and absurd jobs from the past with hilarious interviews
that are infused with fascinatingly true Easter eggs.
Come get weird with us each week as improv comedians
from Groundlings and UCB act out their old fashioned gigs
from another time.
You'll be glad your guidance counselor
didn't recommend any of these jobs.
I'm about to play you a clip from This Job is History.
While you're listening, follow This Job is History
wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, Prime members, you can listen to This Job is History
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Download the Amazon Music app today.
From Wondery, it's This Job is History with me,
Chris Parnell.
Each week, my producer Linda and I invite actual people
from the actual past who've worked the strangest
and most unexpected jobs throughout time.
You'll be transported into the past
and hear remarkable on-the-job stories
straight from the mouths of the people who worked them.
It's not often that we get to talk to someone
from the 18th century, especially someone
in your line of work.
So tell us in your own words, what exactly is a sin eater?
Well, sin eaters are very well below the poor.
They're below the hierarchy altogether, really.
But that's where you stand when your job is banned
by the Church of England.
Wait, why would sin eating be banned by the Church?
If what you say is true, you're saving people's souls.
First of all, Chris, it is true.
Second of all, it's complicated.
So you know how Catholics have last rights,
confession before they die?
Right, of course.
See, ever since we became a Protestant country,
it's not generally accepted to do Catholic things
like last rights or confession.
The vicar says that faith alone is enough
to grant you God's grace.
But most of its insurers believe it does not
to have a little extra reassurance.
Oh, so you're still sort of doing the thing
that the Catholic communion wafers and confessions do.
You're just doing it after people die at dinner time.
No, it's completely different.
And calling it Catholic would get me in a lot of trouble.
What I do as a good Protestant is help people deal
with their guilt and fears.
Otherwise, what would they do?
Um, I wouldn't know, I mean, not to brag,
but my therapist says I'm remarkably good
at suppressing feelings of shame.
Uh, what's a therapist?
Is that what you call sin eaters nowadays?
Oh, a therapist is a person who you see every week to talk.
They give you the confidence to speak up for yourself.
Like when someone kind of tough looking
takes your drink at Starbucks,
or when a kid on a bicycle bumps into you
and says something nasty.
Okay, Abigail, you talk to a therapist about your feelings,
they help you cope with regrets, shame, things like that.
Actually, they basically are sin eaters
except without the eating part.
Hmm, I don't want to alarm you,
but talking about feelings doesn't seem
like it would save you from damnation.
Well, you're symbolically reassuring people.
No, I'm literally eating their sins.
Chris, why don't we move on to some other questions?
Yeah, Abigail, I'm so sorry if I implied
that eating corpse bread didn't literally absolve sins.
Well, I accept your apology, Chris, and I thank you kindly.
Now, here's a different question.
How do you know what sins you're eating?
Or does it all taste like bread?
Truthfully, I can taste it.
Yeah, I've got the gift.
When you've been a sin eater as long as I have,
each sin starts to become very distinguishable.
Gluttony, take, for example, gluttony.
Always, always hungry afterwards.
That's when I know, uh, gluttony.
Sloth, now, sloth, you can't keep the crumbs off the floor.
Doesn't matter what you do, if you wear a bib,
if you've got a tray, they're all over the place.
Now, lust, let me tell you something,
lust is fantastic.
Hmm, it's subtle, but tasty.
It's got a bit of a kick to it, you know?
Hey, Prime members, you can listen to this job as history
early and ad-free on Amazon Music.
The Amazon Music app today.