Stuff You Should Know - Four Eyes Good: The History of Glasses
Episode Date: September 24, 2024Glasses as we know them have only been around for a few hundred years. So what did people do before this? And how did things change once spectacles were on the scene? Listen in to find out.See omnystu...dio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
And it's just the three of us with three pairs of eyes.
And that's all.
Can we all wear glasses?
Yeah, I guess all three of us do now, huh?
You didn't for a really long time.
You were the holdout who kept crashing your car.
Yeah, yeah, I wore and I think I've told this story,
but that was sort of the typical story
of always had really great vision,
and then it's been longer than you think.
Then sometime in my mid-40s, I was like,
huh, this thing I'm reading isn't so clear.
And I went to the doctor and they were like,
yeah, yeah, you're reading, vision is failing,
so just get some glasses.
Did I ever tell you the story of
when I found out I needed glasses?
No, how old were you?
I was in fourth grade,
and we went in for like a lice check
and like a eye exam, just a eye test,
just one of those things where it's like,
obviously the state requires this,
so it's not actually a thing
Scoliosis to while they're at it probably
So I was like totally flabbergasted when they're like you need glasses like I was just expecting not that at all
Yeah, and sure enough when I went in for an eye exam. I was like, oh I can actually see things now I hadn't really noticed and
So yeah since fourth grade I had to wear glasses
or contact lenses and I'll never forget my first pair of glasses I think I was kind of
bummed that I had to wear glasses at all so my mom made sure that we went and got like
the coolest glasses we could find.
That's sweet.
Which were an Elton John special they They were totally clear, with an electric blue wire going through the whole thing.
And I would wear those today if I could find them.
They were pretty awesome.
Yeah, I mean, the time where we grew up,
glasses was definitely like kind of super not cool.
But then I remember by the time we got to high school,
it was, I can't believe I'm admitting this.
I'm actually one of those people who bought fake glasses
and wore it a little while.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, because it was, you know,
international mail, the whole GQ thing.
I thought I was a preppy kid and I thought
they'd make me look cooler and more preppy.
And so I did that toward the shells for a while.
But yeah, glasses.
And as we'll see in this great, great article
that Livia put together for us,
that has long been a push-pull
since kind of the beginning of glasses was,
do they make it seem like you're deficient as a person
or do they make you look like smarter?
Yeah, yeah, no, it's a tension
that's as old as glasses, basically.
And it's sad that it still kinda goes on,
but I think that's really kinda gone the way of the dinosaur.
Thanks to people like you stepping up
and wearing glasses when you didn't need them.
Thanks to Huey Lewis stepping up
and teaching everyone it's tip to be square.
I really think that was probably
the transition point right there.
Yeah, and I also want to point out,
I would love to see pictures of you with those glasses
if you have any, because to me,
there's nothing cuter than a kid wearing glasses.
Well, I don't know if I can put my finger on any of those,
and even if I could, I'm pretty sure the glasses
were my best feature back then.
So you talked about this tension
from the beginning of glasses.
Let's talk about the beginning of glasses.
Because the concept of glasses, as we understand them today,
like these things that you wear
that contain corrective lenses that you can put on your face
and they typically won't fall off.
That's only a few hundred years old.
But people have needed corrective lenses
for long before that.
So there's a really great question
that I've always kind of wondered
that I've never bothered to look up.
Like what about people who needed glasses
before glasses were invented?
Yeah, so again, Livia helped us with this and I think I'm going to use her title
because it was really another Livia special.
I didn't get it.
Four eyes good?
You didn't get it?
No, I still don't.
Well, four eyes means you wear glasses.
Right.
And so, you know, four eyes is good.
Okay, so there's...
Like, it helps you see better.
There's no deeper meaning or pun or reference to it?
Oh, I don't think so.
Because, I mean, why didn't she include R?
Like, Four Eyes are good.
I just took it, I may be wrong, we'll have to ask Livia,
as just Four Eyes good, like Tuk Tuk would say.
Yeah, okay. All right, maybe so.
Yeah, we have to ask Livia. I may be staring at an obvious pun, though,
that I'm not overlooking, so who knows?
Well, we're both overlooking it if we are,
so don't feel bad.
Let me put on my pun glasses.
You need to break those things.
All right, so anyway, I agree.
You know, Livia kind of points out, like,
as reading came along, people needed glasses more and more because a lot of, like myself, if I never read anything, I would be just
fine.
Like I might look at something close to me and be like, well, it might look a little
fuzzy, but it's not like reading something that's fuzzy.
So for, before reading became a big, big thing, not as many people noticed, I think.
And then I think people who had,
which is it, nearsighted or farsighted
when you can't see something far away?
You're nearsighted.
Like you're sighted to see things nearby.
Okay, so I think those people were just kind of SOL
and just was like, oh well, I guess this
one of the things that happens to people.
Yes, there is such a thing as hereditary myopia
where you can be myopic because you were born that way.
But the larger point here is that there were far, far fewer people who were myopic than there are today
because of the advent of reading. And there's studies that show that the more students read,
the more myopic they become.
And it's just astounding to me.
I didn't ever think of it that way, but it's totally true.
From reading, glasses came as a necessity.
Yeah, and the people that may have been, had, you know, not great close focus back in the day,
may have done things like engraving or these skills where they were doing something kind of like reading.
Right, right.
So, and we've had lenses, just not corrective lenses,
for a very long time.
About almost 5,000 years ago, people were grinding things
like quartz into lenses, but they were basically
like little six-year-old kids.
They would use them to start fires with.
That's what their purpose was.
And they were developed independently
in different parts of the world.
Like, Assyria and Greece had them about 5,000 years ago,
and about 2,000 years ago, they developed them in Peru,
which is pretty cool too.
But I mean, a good idea is a good idea,
and I think things like that prove that.
Yeah, for sure.
Was Archimedes death ray, was that a lens?
It was a mirror.
All right.
Yeah, I thought of that too.
Ooh, we did a great podcast on mirrors a long time ago.
Remember that one?
That was a good one.
My brain is still broken from that.
Like it was one of those things where I just assumed
it would be pretty easy and it's not at all easy.
It's really hard to comprehend mirrors and how they work.
Yeah, totally. All right, so yeah, they were polishing lenses and I think the reading stone
was the first kind of use of a lens to help you read something and those were the little
round things that you would sit, literally sit on a book and push along rather than hold it out like
a magnifying glass. And
there was a lot of monk, a lot of monks doing a lot of this because I think they
were doing more like text work than a lot of most people back then. Yeah, because
you didn't have a way to copy anything except for by hand, so that was a huge
role of monks. So yeah, they definitely needed those. And then translating things
into other languages. There's a really good example of an important development in the field of
like glasses or corrective lenses that happened because somebody translated
the writing of an Arab scholar named Abu Ali Al-Hasan Ibn Al-Haytham, who was
born in 965 CE.
who was born in 965 CE. And he actually figured out that we see
because our eyes sense beams of light.
And in other parts of the world, like for example, Greece,
they thought it was the opposite,
that we shot laser beams out of our eyes.
And I know we've talked about that before,
because it's so preposterous that I just love it,
but I don't remember what episode.
But Al-Haytham figured this out,
but he was writing in Arabic.
Luckily, there was a monk who was also a physicist,
a Polish monk named Vitolo,
who in the 1200s translated Al-Haytham
from Arabic to Latin,
which gave a chance for another monk, an English monk named Roger Bacon,
to read it in Latin and then build on Al-Haytham's findings about vision and optics.
Is it weird to me that I thought a monk being named Roger Bacon was funny sounding?
No, it is. it's really funny.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, no, it's, I mean, it's just such a modern name,
but also a silly modern name.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, good.
I'm with you.
No offense to Kevin.
No, no, he knows.
Yeah.
If we're talking about glasses, like, you know,
the glasses that we think of today,
still not, you know, you'll note
there's some key things missing here still.
But if we're talking about a convex lens
to help someone who is farsighted read, text, or a book,
you gotta go to Italy.
In the late 13th century, Italy,
with a little bit of Germany mixed in here and there,
but it seems like Italy really drove
the glasses industry forward
using crown glass at the time, like, glass for their lenses, and we'll get to that switch later on too.
But they speculate that they were grinding, and they were making mirrors and polishing
stones and stuff, so it probably wasn't a big leap to start doing the same kind of things
with the same kind of tools to make glass lenses.
Yeah, and so like you said, there were convex lenses to help magnify things for people who are farsighted,
and that is far, far easier to make than the concave lens, as we'll see.
So those convex lenses were around for centuries before corrective lenses for people with myopia came along.
before corrective lenses for people with myopia came along. Yeah, and another thing you're gonna wanna do,
maybe, is if you're in a place to look things up
for image searches, these are all fun,
to look at these antique glasses.
If you look up rivet spectacles, R-I-V-E-T,
these were sort of the first glasses
that were held together by a little, you know, rivet, it looks like a hinge.
I couldn't tell, it looks like they might move
and like fold upon each other, is that true?
I don't know, but it looked like that to me too.
I would guess so.
They're kind of cool looking, but one thing you notice
is that even with the rivet spectacles, they're not,
you don't hang that rivet on your nose.
It's still just a hinge to hold them together.
Yeah, you had to hold classes or spectacles
with your hand for centuries
after they were invented, basically.
And like we said, with the advent of reading,
thanks to things like the Gutenberg printing press
in the 1400s or later in the 1600s
when Europe started to publish newspapers all over the place,
reading became much more widespread. And so the place, reading became much more widespread.
And so the need for glasses became much more widespread thanks to the development of myopia
from reading and especially reading by candlelight.
Yeah, I guess that would really put a strain on your eyes, right?
Totally, for sure. And so this is also about the time in medieval,
I think medieval Europe,
where the whole thing kind of became like,
all right, is this a fashion statement?
Are you showing everybody that you're correcting
a disability?
What's the deal here with glasses?
This is around the time where it really kind of started
to take hold.
And in fact, Olivia turned up something I thought was pretty interesting.
Depending on the painter, and depending on how you wanted to depict the person,
especially during the Renaissance, you might show somebody who was born
before glasses were invented wearing glasses to get across how studious and scholarly they were.
Or if you wanted to show how cool somebody was, if they were known to wear glasses,
you might leave the glasses out altogether.
Yeah. Yeah, it's that weird push pull that we were talking about.
And I guess it just depended on maybe just the time and place
and what the culture was like in that particular time and place, right?
Right. They were also a way to depict wealth.
Remember, it had a painting called The Parable of the Rich Fool, which is a Bible story.
So, of course, this took place long before there was such a thing as glasses.
But he included glasses on the rich fool to show how rich he was.
Yeah, and in China, because these spread via the Silk Road to Asia,
some of their judiciary committees, they were like, here's your uniform,
and part of it was glasses, whether you needed them or not.
Like you.
Like me.
Nice work.
You want to take a break?
Yeah, I mean, since we literally just jinxed each other, I think we should take a break.
That's right.
You owe me a Coke.
All right.
Be right back.
How do you feel about biscuits?
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Hey, y'all.
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So Chuck, before we get started again, I want to say something.
Every time I say glasses or hear glasses or even read glasses, in my head Velma goes,
my glasses.
It's been happening constantly.
And I think what's most significant about it is it hasn't gotten old yet.
So Velma from Scooby Doo, would she lose her glasses?
She invariably said, my glasses.
And I just got it in my head.
And you've been doing that for two days?
Yeah, over and over and over and over.
It's going on right now as we speak, as a matter of fact.
And by the sounds of it, you were also
practicing that Arabic name.
I actually did not out loud.
Really?
Yeah.
You busted that thing out, man. I just have a out loud. Really? Yeah.
You busted that thing out, man.
I just have a silver tongue for Arabic, apparently.
That was really good.
Thanks.
Okay, so let's get started.
We talked about how the lenses for farsightedness were around for centuries before nearsightedness,
but we eventually got to those.
I guess in like the 15th century, the 1400s,
again not coincidentally with the spread of reading, we finally figured out how to
make lenses that are concave, that correct vision for people who can see
things nearby but not far away.
That's right. And the other way around, like you mentioned in Act 1, a lot harder to do,
there was a cardinal named Nicholas of Cusa, and this is where the Germany part comes in because that's where Germany
is now. He's given a lot of credit to developing the convex lens, but once again, it was really
Italy where a lot of this was taking place, specifically Florence where they were really
crafting excellent lenses for the
time and I think they were pretty pretty darn good at it even like compared to
today I've read that it's like kind of remarkable how good they were at this
yeah yeah for sure I mean I always equate Venice with glass because of
Venetian glass but sure sure, why not Florence too?
So there are a couple of innovations that came along in the 17th century, the 1600s,
that really kind of helped push things forward.
So we've been making glass for centuries by then, but as they were trying to figure out
how to make these things refract light, that's how lens is correct.
They refract light at different angles, depending on what you need to see in focus.
They figured out that not only could you use traditional glass and then shape it in certain ways,
you could add certain things to glass that would help with their refractiveness.
So they figured out that if they add low iron potash or lead oxide, it will give it a higher
refractive index, but you need less glass to do that.
So all of a sudden glasses became immediately less clunky and a little more comfortable.
Yeah, for sure.
And you know, you mentioned paintings in the first part, but I thought the encyclopedia brownness of this next bit
was really pretty great because there is actual evidence
of concave lens use in Raphael's painting
Portrait of Pope Leo X and Two Cardinals.
And it-
You say 10, huh?
What do you say, X?
Yeah, I know it's 10, huh? What do you say, X?
I know it's 10, but it just sounds cooler as
Popplio X.
So, Popplio was part of the Medici family,
which had genetic myopia,
was well known back then.
And you can see, and this is where it gets Encyclopedia Brown,
you can see in the painting, behind the lens,
his thumb is smaller, showing that it's a distance lens,
and that is just that little detail for someone to paint that
and then other people to notice is pretty great.
I mean, that's so Raphael, you know?
Yeah.
And then there were some other advances, too,
that weren't exactly corrective lenses,
but people figured out, especially the Dutch were super into this, that if you exactly corrective lenses but people figured out especially the Dutch were super into this that if you took corrective
lenses that could bend light in different ways you could see things that
were really small or you could see things that were really far away and so
they were really helpful in developing the microscope and the telescope too.
That's right but I know everyone's chomping at the bit.
Saying, these glasses that you can hold up to your face are fine.
But guys, when did people start wearing glasses?
We can go to the 17th century finally, when we got the bow spectacle.
Or is it bow?
I wonder that myself.
I think bow.
Like a bow and arrow bow.
It's like the shape of a bow without the string. I think that's what it is. Okay, that's what I think bow, like a bow and arrow bow. It's like the shape of a bow without the string.
I think that's what it is.
Okay, that's what I think it is too.
But those are the glasses that still didn't have,
what do you call those things on the sides?
The temples, or the arms now.
The arms, yeah, no arms yet,
but they had a little thing
where you could slip it over your nose,
and it would, you know, if you had a good fit,
it would sit there.
Otherwise, you probably still needed to assist it
with your fingies.
Yeah, exactly the same thing that's still around now.
It sits on the bridge of your nose and rests
and helps, you know, hold your glasses up, right?
Yeah.
So that was a huge advance.
It's funny when you look back at this stuff,
you're just like,
this is all just such low-hanging fruit glasses, guys.
Why didn't you just put them together immediately?
And that's just not how it went.
I mean, this person contributed this,
this person contributed that,
and they took millennia to develop,
which I just find astounding.
It's like a miracle that we have glasses today
based on how long and plotting their development was.
Well, yeah, and what's the funniest thing to me
about all of this is I was reading each little development
was the whole time the ears are sitting there
on the side of your head, just like,
hey guys, we have two literal anchor points
sticking out of the side of everybody's head.
And still no one, I think in Spain,
Livia found that some people would tie a string
and then tie it around their ear,
like if they were playing soccer or something, I guess.
But no one still was like,
hey, maybe we should make something to sit on those ears.
So to be fair, there was a guy named Edward Scarlett
who was an optician in London in the 1720s,
and he saw what you're talking about.
But at the time, so he invented temples, those sides, those arms, but they didn't curve downward
to take advantage of those natural anchor points, the backs of the ears like we use
today.
But there was a good reason why, and that was at the time, anyone who was wealthy enough
to afford glasses also wore powdered wigs, and that was at the time, anyone who was wealthy enough to afford glasses
also wore powdered wigs and those things were giant
and covered the ears.
So you couldn't use the back of the ears like that
because they were covered up,
but you could use the temples as pressure points
for those arms that he came up with.
So those were just like little squeezies?
Essentially, yeah, they would give you a migraine
in like three minutes.
Okay.
Well, because I did also see that,
or Olivia found rather that they,
some people would attach a ribbon,
but they still wouldn't time around the ear,
they would just tie it around the back of their head.
It's like a harlequin mask.
Yeah, yeah, to those squeezy temples.
Finally, we get a guy that gets closer in 752 an English optician named James
Ice-coff, I guess
Had a double hinge side
and
Well, actually, I don't think he invented the the turnpin template
That was about 25 years after that because the turn template from, or temple from what I can tell,
it goes straight back and then has a hinge,
and then goes straight down behind the ear,
90 degrees, but it doesn't like curve around the ear.
It was just a big 90 degree drop
that sat down a couple of inches even below the ear.
Right, but it finally started to take advantage
of the back of the ear, right?
Yeah, in a clunky way.
But at the same time, with these guys putting hinges
in there, now you have these arms that can,
number one, fold away for convenience,
but also number two, if they're double spring,
they can also bend kind of outwards.
So now you could just put glasses on
and they would fit to your giant head or your tiny head,
depending on the size, immediately,
thanks to the spring
in those hinges.
Yeah, I remember seeing those for the first time, and that seemed like a very modern invention
in like the 80s, but that's not true at all.
No, and I think it took a little while for it to become ubiquitous, but it was older
than that for sure. Yeah, well I only use, you know, I found
a number of years ago that the Ray-Ban Wayfarer
is kind of the only sunglass that I look okay in.
Okay.
So I've only worn those and then I just buy those frames
to get my readers made, because it's the only shape
that I've ever found works for my face, it's the only shape that I've ever found
works for my face, and so I'm a Wayfarer purist, I guess.
I can do Wayfarers, and I can do Aviators, too.
I can't pull those off.
The ones that I can't pull off
that I really wish I could are the,
I wanna say Carreras, but they're not.
You know what I'm talking about?
Those Italian ones that are super sleek looking
that you basically have to wear a Speedo with. I think I know exactly what you'm talking about? Those Italian ones that are super sleek looking that you basically have to wear a Speedo with.
I think I know exactly what you're talking about.
Yeah, those. I wish I could rock those and they just do not look right on me.
And I think we should include a little PSA here. For everybody that wears those giant
multicolored reflective visor sunglasses now,
nobody looks good in those.
Which ones?
The giant visor sunglasses that are super in right now.
What is visor?
What do you mean, like a hat visor?
No, like ski goggles, but without the goggle part.
They're just sunglasses, but they're that massive
and colorfully reflective.
How have you not seen these?
I don't know, like Oakleys?
Kind of, yeah, I'm sure Oakleys makes them.
Yes, bigger, just imagine bigger.
I'm gonna have to look up a picture of these
because I have not, also I don't get around
in the world too much.
I mean, I'm surprised you at least haven't seen
like a delivery person wearing them.
Oh, well, you know what's funny?
I just did a rare intro lookup
and I see exactly what you're talking about.
I do not like those.
I did not know people were wearing those.
Oh yeah, they're huge now.
But they also, when you type in visor sunglasses,
they make sunglasses with a little visor over them.
Oh, that's neat.
Like the Dwayne Wayne little flip up sunglasses?
Well, those are individual for each side.
This is, I'm sending you a picture of this dude right now
because he's rocking it pretty hard.
Nice.
Anyway, where I started with the whole Ray-Ban thing
is they don't make the spring ones where they, you know,
they have a pretty fat head, then luckily they fit my face,
but they don't, you know, bend outward, flex outward.
They have what are called barrel hinges in there.
No, they don't.
They stop at like, I guess, 90 degrees to the frame.
But you can go in and get those little parts
of the barrel hinges adjusted to fit your head
if they don't automatically fit your head.
Man, you know a lot about this stuff.
Well, you know, I've been wearing them since fourth grade
and you just pick up facts here and there. All right, just to cite a further example
of the push and pull of cool versus not cool,
Napoleon needed glasses, thought they made him look weak,
so did not wear them, and as a result,
I think, like, tripped over stuff,
and people thought he was clumsy.
I mean, he rode a horse, and he couldn't see.
That's kind of dangerous.
Totally. There was's kind of dangerous.
Totally.
There's another kind of big splash
that happened with glasses that made him fashionable.
But it was one of those things where
something that's ugly and utilitarian becomes fashionable.
And it was a type of glasses invented by Benjamin Martin.
They ended up being called Martin's Margins
because they're hugely thick frames.
And the reason that Martin invented them like that
is because they block light coming in
from different directions rather than looking forward,
and that can obscure your vision a little bit.
And he's absolutely right, that totally is true.
If you're just outside looking, wearing say contacts,
and you put on glasses, there's a huge difference
between the two because the frames block some of the light
coming downward into your eyes.
And everybody made fun of these
because they were just so ugly,
but people started wearing them and so everybody
who were making fun of them started making
and selling them too.
Yeah, and they're kind of crazy looking
when you look at them now.
I have seen some people that kind of emulated this style,
but it was noteworthy too,
because it was one of the first ones
that had any kind of noticeable rim.
Usually it was just the lens
and kind of the smallest piece of whalebone
or wire or something that could host that lens.
Right, for sure.
Yeah.
So, the 1600s I think saw some technical advances, but the 19th century was just a boom century
for especially using corrective lenses, right?
Not just fashion or the way that they were made or getting around to putting arms that
reach behind the back of the ear,
but like the actual function of glasses
became exponentially better in the 19th century.
Yeah, because, you know, previous to this,
the way you got glasses was,
the glasses manufacturer would make a bunch of them,
and then they would send a salesperson around
in a wagon, or I guess eventually a car,
and they would travel around and kind of do like
the over-the-counter readers that,
what was it, like 34% of Americans
actually use those these days?
34 million, I think.
Oh yeah, 34.
It's a lot.
Yeah, 34 million.
But it was on the road.
Basically, you just didn't have a prescription
specific to your eye.
Someone just came around, you were like,
well, these will do, I guess.
But now, all of a sudden, you got a real vision test.
So they could dial in a prescription for you
for the first time.
Yeah, and that was thanks to people
who started inventing tools that are still kind of in
use today, evolved versions.
In particular, there's a guy named Hermann von Helmholtz, who goes without saying, was
German.
He invented the Ophthalmoscope and the Ophthalometer.
And the Ophthalmoscope lets you see the back of a patient's eyeball.
So when they look at your eye and they're shining a light and they're like,
don't look into the light, look in my ear or something like that.
That's essentially an ophthalmoscope that Herman von Helmholtz invented in the 1850s.
And then the ophthalmometer, you can assess essentially the curvature
of the back of the retina while you're looking at the
retina through an ophthalmoscope.
And what you have now is basically the invention of the ability to figure out what kind of
corrective lenses you needed.
Ophthalmology, it was born at this time.
And so now they could really take exact measurements
and then create the glasses for you specifically,
and they just worked so much better.
Yeah, and I'm glad you took all those words.
Those are hard.
Should we mention that we had to edit out
at least one attempt of ophthalmology?
Yeah, I mean, that was the easiest one, I think,
because that's a word people commonly say,
but there's something about the ophthalm being at the beginning that just makes it a little brain breaking.
It's horrendous.
Opthal, opthal, op, what did you say for that second machine?
Opthalmometer.
I tried to add an extra syllable as per my usual.
Opthalmometer, yeah?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, that's way better than the meter.
Ophthalmometer.
Oh boy.
Are we going to talk about the diopter?
I think we should just mention it
because it was a huge breakthrough.
We don't have to go into the formula,
but there were a pair of French ophthalmologists
who in the 1870s figured out that you could quantify
just how much vision correction you needed. And it's mind-bending that it's called the
diopter. And it's a really simple formula, but it's really hard to understand. But just
take for granted that ophthalmologists understand how to use that. And so if you look at your prescription, whether for glasses or for contacts, the
thing that's labeled power, that number is in diopters.
And that just means how much of a refraction correction you need to focus stuff far
away or nearby at your retina, rather than in front of you or behind you as you
naturally would be with your nearsightedness
or farsightedness.
Yeah, is the key to all this, that machine
that you look through with the lenses that they flip down
during the eye test?
I think that's almost like a,
like they're zeroing in on their observations
of what your eye looks like,
and now they've got it narrowed down
to a couple of different diopters.
It's almost to me like that,
those traveling salesmen who'd be like,
try this pair on, try this pair on,
but they're doing it with a cool machine
that has slides instead.
Right.
That's my take, I could be wrong.
I probably am wrong.
Well, I'd like to hear from ophthalmologists, because I know there's a lot more to it than, like,
just sit down in front of this machine and we'll punch the numbers into the whatever and it'll spit out your prescription.
Like, there's actual expertise involved.
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, they have to, like, observe and make guesses based on their observation from what I can understand.
How about that little eye puff, the little air puff you get? and make guesses based on their observation from what I can understand.
How about that little eye puff,
the little air puff you get?
It takes some time to get used to.
Do you like that?
No, I don't like it, but it's definitely,
I mean all this was brand new to me a decade ago-ish.
So, like you said, you've been doing it since you were what,
like 12, 11?
Yeah, however old you are in fourth grade.
10?
I don't know, but yes, around that time. 12, 11? Yeah, however old you are in fourth grade. 10?
I don't know, but yes, around that time.
To me, those things are like the same experience
of pulling a nose hair out, you know?
Like you just, it's in some weird masochistic way,
like enjoyable, but it's not really.
Yeah.
All right, so we're having too much fun here.
Let's take a break and get serious,
and we'll talk a little bit more about plastics
and bifocals and monocles and sunglasses
and everything else right after this.
["The Biscuit Show"]
How do you feel about biscuits? Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit, where I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school
to change their racist mascot, the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves,
the biscuits.
I was a lady rebel. Like, what does that even mean?
The Boone County Rebels will stay the Boone County Rebels, but the image of the biscuits...
It's right here in black and white in Prince. A lion.
An individual that came to the school saying that God sent him to talk to me about the mascot switch
is a leader. You choose hills that you want to die on.
Why would we want to be the losing team? I just take all the other stuff out of home.
Segregation academies, when the civil rights
said that we need to integrate public schools,
these charter schools were exempt from it.
Bigger than a flag or mascot.
You have to be ready for serious backlash.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
In a galaxy far, far away. No, babe, that's taken. We're in our own world, remember?
Right. In our own world. We're two space cadets. And totally normal humans. Sure, totally normal humans. Embark on a journey across the stars,
discovering the wonders of the universe one episode at a time.
We'll talk about life, love, laughter, and why you should never argue with your co-pilot.
Especially when she's always right.
Right. And if we hit turbulence, just blame it on Mercury retrograde.
Or Emily's questionable space piloting skills.
Hey! Join us on In Our Own World for cosmic conversations,
stellar laughs, and super corny dad jokes.
Listen to In Our Own World as a part of the MyCultura
podcast network available on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And don't worry, we promise to avoid any black holes.
Most of the time.
Do you ever wonder where your favorite foods come from?
Like what's the history behind bacon wrapped hot dogs?
Hi, I'm Eva Longoria.
Hi, I'm Maite Gomez-Rejón.
Our podcast Hungry for History is back.
Season 2.
Season 2.
Are we recording? Are we good?
Oh, we pushed record, right?
And this season we're taking an even bigger bite
out of the most delicious food and its history.
Seeing that the most popular cocktail is the margarita,
followed by the mojito from Cuba,
and the piñuculada from Puerto Rico.
So all of these, we have, we thank Latin culture.
There's a mention of blood sausage in Homer's Odyssey
that dates back to the ninth century BC.
BC?
I didn't realize how old the hot dog was.
Listen to Hungry for History as part
of the My Kultura podcast network,
available on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
["Stuff You Should Know"]
-♪ Stuff you should know. All right, so we promised toxic plastic.
After World War I, plastics became a big thing, and resin, specifically CR39, became the first
big kind of popular plastic used for lenses, which is still a pretty popular choice today.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, so that was a huge advancement in lenses.
But people were still making glass lenses for a long time.
Until 1972, in the United States, the FDA said,
hey, walking around with two glass lenses on your eyes,
like so close to your eyes, is probably kind of of scary So now all lenses need to be shatter proof
So a lot of glasses makers just turned to plastics at that point
yeah, and plastic worked, you know, it was it was much better in a lot of ways because
They were you know turned out to be more durable once they figured out the scratch resistance. Mm-hmm
They wouldn't shatter near eye, obviously.
You could have a lot more kinds of styles.
You could have rimless glasses.
Obviously, plastics in the frames
created a boom in fashion eyewear,
like in the 50s with the cat eye glasses and horn rim glasses
and tortoiseshell.
And like the glasses you talked about in the 70s and 80s,
the big giant, or I don't know if you mentioned them, the big giant like denier worn at the end of casino.
Yeah, I love those, man.
Jesse Thorne has some of those. I'm so jealous whenever I see those.
Those seem to be based on a military issue type of glasses,
which we didn't say the two world Wars helped make glasses normal in the United States because so many soldiers
needed them that the government started issuing them, like two million plus pairs.
But the standard issue military glasses were so ugly, they were called, informally of course,
birth control glasses or BCGs.
And if you look them up, they are that ugly.
They're terrible.
Did they look like the DeNiro ones, or are they just giant?
They weren't nearly as cool as the DeNiro ones.
They were an uglier version of the DeNiro ones.
Got it.
I'm going to look those up, too.
Yeah, they're tough to look at.
Yeah, GI glasses, they're sometimes called as well.
It's like, thanks a lot, Army.
Exactly. So that was a huge advance, but just kind of dialing it back a little bit time-wise.
There's like an old story that Ben Franklin invented the bifocals,
and that seems to actually be correct based on a letter that he wrote to one of his friends in the late 1700s, where he basically described creating bifocals
by having a glassmaker cut his two different sets
of glasses in half, right?
Did the letter say, for instance,
I'm reading what I'm writing,
and now I'm looking across the room,
and now I'm reading what I'm writing,
and now I'm looking across the room?
Right, yeah, it had a lot of that, couple paragraphs.
Yeah, but you know, seems like he did.
He said that he could see his food and look at people at the dinner party at the same time.
Progressive lenses came along, this sort of shocks me, I thought they were newer too, but they came along in 1959.
And isn't the idea there that it's sort of like a bifocal that's just sort of blended in and less harsh?
It's actually a trifocal.
There's distant, mid, and near all mixed together
and it just depends, I guess, on where your eye focuses.
I think it's magic basically.
They're also called multifocal lenses.
Yeah, I think they offered me those
just so I could wear glasses all the time.
And I was like, I don't want to wear glasses all the time if I don't have to.
I don't mind putting them on to read.
There's a theory that you should use glasses as little as possible
and use the lowest power, say contacts, as possible
because your eyes can get dependent on the stronger prescription
or wearing them all the time. I don't know if that's a folktale or something,
but it definitely intuitively makes sense.
Yeah, I think it totally makes sense.
Okay. Well, then you made the right choice, Chuck.
Can we talk about monocles?
Yes, let's please.
I think this is the high point of this episode.
Yeah, monocles are kind of fun if you don't know
what a monocle is.
I guess I'm assuming is the single round lens that would, you would just sort of, you know, it was made to fit
your eye because you were wealthy if you had one, and you would just sort of stick it in
there and sort of squint around it a bit to hold it in.
But from the very beginning, it seems like the monocle was, it kind of just said one
thing which is, look at me, I'm a pompous, rich person
who wants you to know that I'm pompous and rich.
Yeah, which is, that's the reason why Eustace Tilly,
the mascot for The New Yorker, has a monocle.
Right, yeah.
Or The Monopoly Man has a monocle.
It can also be exotic, like The Count from Sesame Street.
Where's the monocle?
Yeah, I looked this up by the way,
this isn't off the top of my head.
The Penguin, the Burgess Meredith Penguin
from the QB 60s Batman monocle.
Colonel Clink, I'm not sure what the point was
of his monocle.
Oh, maybe sort of evil villain.
Yeah, it made him eat more evil, didn't it?
I think so. But I'm not quite sure how.
But there's a long history of people wearing monocles.
But one thing that I had noticed before that I never really
kind of sat down and put together
is that they were also used in the early 20th century
by women who were eschewing traditional gender roles.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, think of, so have you ever seen Madonna wearing like a tuxedo and a monocle?
She's basically making a nod to like Weimar Republic German women, probably lesbians of
the era, who were basically dressing like men and one of the big fashion accessories
for that was the monocle.
Oh, okay, that makes sense.
Yeah, I think it's pretty cool. Dietrich and DiMaggio. Exactly. fashion accessories for that was the Monocle. Oh, okay, that makes sense.
Yeah, I think it's pretty cool.
Dietrich and DiMaggio.
Exactly.
What a great song.
Oh, God, so good.
All right, should we talk a little bit about sunglasses?
Yes, take it away.
Yeah, this is, I mean, sunglasses have been around
a long time as far as something to wear on your face
to shield your eyes from the sun.
Not necessarily like darker lenses or dark lenses, but Inuit people, a couple of thousand
years ago were wearing sun goggles, which essentially is because of the bright sun and
the snow, was either like wood or ivory or something that fit around your eyes and had
a little slits cut,
almost like sort of the old tanning bed goggles
that you would wear.
Exactly.
If you were into that in the 80s.
And again, like those big frames
that kind of block some light, they did that,
but the slits also narrowed your vision too,
so it actually focused further away too.
But what about lenses?
They started darkening those a while ago too, didn't they?
Yeah, I think as far back as Samuel Pepys in the 17th century,
the famous diarist, whose name I finally pronounced correctly,
he tended, I think his glasses green to protect his eyes from candlelight
when he was writing late at night.
So they've been around a really long time,
and even before that, I think there's a legend
that Emperor Nero used ground emeralds
as basically sunglasses when he hung out at the Coliseum.
You know, this is not a look that looks good on me at all,
but when I was just in LA,
I went to dinner with friends of the show, David Reese,
by the way, and Paul F. Tompkins and his great wife,
Janie, they all say hello, by the way.
Nice, hello.
Paul, you know, Mr. Fashion, wore vision glasses
that were tinted blue, and they looked really,
really sharp on him.
I could never pull off, but they looked really good.
Paul of Tompkins can pull off basically anything.
He knows exactly what he can wear,
and there's a wide range, and he does it really well.
Guess what color his shirt was.
I'm going to guess a different shade of blue.
Yeah, it went perfectly.
Did he wear a thick plaid?
Like, not the coat was thick,
but the plaid was thick, the pattern of the plaid
was a very thick, prominent plaid, blue jacket?
It was actually a white suit with white chuck-a-boots
and a solid blue shirt with the blue glasses, very, very sharp.
I very rarely say the word wow, but that one was well-earned.
But you found, I think his were just blue blue,
but you found some good information on the, to me,
magic that happens when you are inside with clear glasses
and you walk outside and they turn into sunglasses.
Yeah, transition lenses, which it turns out,
transitions is a proprietary eponym basically,
like Kleenex, because it's so successful.
Everybody calls any what are called
photochromic lenses, transition lenses.
So transition lenses are photochromic
but not all photochromic lenses are transition
essentially is what I'm saying.
The thing that strikes me Chuck is like
they've been around since the 1960s
cause I definitely identify them
with late 80s, early 90s.
Yeah, but I mean, you found the stuff on how it works
and I still don't understand how that's not just black magic.
Well, there's basically, there's certain kinds of dyes
called photochromic dyes.
And the more they're exposed to UV light,
the darker they get, because the more light they absorb.
And so they've actually figured out how to include these in the lenses.
So when there's not UV light, say you're inside,
the photochromic dyes are arranged as certain kinds of molecules,
and they're transparent.
But when they're exposed to UV, they break apart and form different molecules,
which absorb light much more, which darkens them.
And since there's a bunch of them in the lenses, the lenses turn dark and you effectively have
sunglasses.
And then when you go back out of the UV light exposure, they go back to their normal molecular
configuration.
Just incredible.
I thought so too.
Hats off to Warby Parker, by the way, for explaining that understandably, I think.
Thank you, Mr. Warby.
Mm-hmm.
What about scratch-resistant lenses?
Because these to me are, this is the story of the show.
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of great facts
of the show in here.
The proprietary epitome of progressive,
certainly one of them.
Mm-hmm.
But, you know, ground lenses, you said, you know,
in 1972, this one, the FDA said, you can't have glass breaking right in front of them. But, you know, ground lens, you said, you know, in 1972, this one the
FDA said you can't have glass breaking right in front of your eyeball. So the
plastics came around and they were great for not shattering, but they were very
scratchy or scratchable, I guess. And NASA actually developed technology to try and make astronaut helmet face visors not scratchy.
And so this is one of those NASA inventions that made it to the regular world when Foster Grant in 1983,
who I don't think we mentioned, they were sort of the first big sunglasses company.
They weren't the biggest in the 80s just because they had the coolest commercials.
They had been around since the 80s just because they had the coolest commercials.
They had been around since the 1920s selling sunglasses.
So they said, hey, NASA, we want to license that technology to make our lenses scratch-resistant.
And all of a sudden, that's just sort of the... I mean, I think you can't even get them
that aren't scratch-resistant these days, right?
No, there's no point.
You would go through glasses every couple months, basically.
Why would you do that?
Save a couple of bucks?
Yeah, basically, yeah.
And you'd end up buying way more glasses
and spending way more money, probably.
But those scratch resistant lenses, just out of the gate,
they made glasses last 10 times longer, which
even went beyond glass, like how good glass lenses could last too.
So there was a huge advancement as well.
All right, well, if you wanna look at today,
I mean, we're not gonna talk about Contacts too much.
That may be its own episode at some point.
But they did debut in 1887,
which to me is a startling thing
that people were inserting a glass lens from 1887 onto their eyeball.
Because that's what it had to be.
Even in 1961 when they were, like the soft contacts were invented,
they were still pretty hard and you would not want to have worn them.
Do you do the disposable ones?
Yeah, multifocal.
So what does that mean? It means that I can see
far away in the middle ground and nearby basically how based on how my iris
focuses. And then you use those for a day and then they go away and then you use
another? Yeah you're supposed to use them for a day but I use them for three to
five days until they get uncomfortable.
It's just like a waste.
You know?
Can you sleep in those?
No, you're not supposed to.
I used to all the time, because I hated taking them out
and putting them in.
And then I grew up, and I'm like, yeah, I should not do that,
because it's really bad for your eyes.
Yeah, it just seems like a lost sort of time when, hey,
don't anyone move. I lost a contact.
Or the little cases and washing them out every night
and that kind of thing.
Yeah, yeah, because there weren't disposables.
It was, you bought those contacts,
it was basically like your retainer.
You do not lose your retainer.
Right. You know?
Same thing with your contacts.
Oh goodness, we lived through a great era, I think.
All right, so today, if you look at some stats,
the 166 U.S. adults
wear prescription eyeglasses.
That's about 64% of people.
Like you mentioned earlier, 34.5 million people wear the over-the-counter readers.
About 45 million wear contacts.
And that is, that's a lot of people with,
that feels like most adults have some sort of
eye correction going on.
Because all of us went through school
and had to read books all the time.
I guess so.
It's not many people that are in their 50s and up
that don't need any sort of glasses or lenses at all.
Right.
You can thank your public school for that.
I guess so.
You got anything else about glasses?
No, that was a fun one.
I like these histories like the dentistry one.
These are fun for me.
Yeah, I thought of the dentistry one
when I was researching this too.
Well, thanks again to Livia for helping us with this one
and thank you for listening.
And since Chuck said he doesn't have anything else right now it's time for listener mail. I'm gonna
call this just a little shout out you know when it comes to talking about
stuff on the show like any sort of you know the latest words that people
should use in terms of like gender and things like that like we always try and
stay on top of things
while we also try and speak to like a wide audience
and make sure things are super clear to everybody.
And it's a delicate balance for us.
So we try and this was just a letter of thanks
from someone from Canada.
Hey guys, just listening to the share episode
and I wanted to stop and say thank you.
The way you talked about her son Chaz
who was transgender, was perfect.
You gendered him correctly even in referring to him pre-transition when you mentioned when he was born.
I know it might sound silly, but it made me glassy-eyed to hear.
As a trans person, it was so hard to be in a world that seems determined to hate us
or make it harder for us to exist as the normal humans that we are.
So hearing you talk about Chaz and not make his transness a bigger deal than it needed to be and here you talk about
Them in a way we trans people advocate that we should be talked about really move me
Thank you for working so hard to get it right
I know it hasn't always gone perfectly, but I know you care a lot and want to get it right every time
This is part of why after 15 years. I've been listening every week. Thanks for all you do and for keeping me learning new things, making me laugh while
I do. I hope you have an amazing weekend friends and that is Lucy from Canada.
Awesome. Thanks Lucy. We appreciate that big time. That was a good one Chuck. Thanks for
picking that.
Yeah. We do our best folks.
If you want to do a hat tip to us like
Lucy did, we love those. We'll take those any day of the week and you can send
them to us via email at stuffpodcastsatihartradio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeart
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you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Gianna Perdenti.
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