Stuff You Should Know - Henry Ford: The Good, Bad and Ugly
Episode Date: September 10, 2024Henry Ford was an odd guy, but one who had a vision for America that centered around a populist, affordable and reliable automobile. He was also a noted antisemite and not a great father. Today, we di...ve into the life of FMC's founder. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
And this is Stuff You Should Know, the biopic edition of Henry Ford.
Who plays him?
Well, I feel like technology's getting close to a point
where we could dig him up and reanimate him
and he could just play himself.
So maybe we wait like five years and then do it.
Yeah, you know, I didn't even see a lot of pictures
of this guy.
You have, he's very plain looking, but if you know, if you know what you're looking at, like a picture of him, he's a wily old codger.
I thought you were going to say cuss.
I could have. It would have worked just as well. But you can just, you can just see it. And the more you know about him, when you see one of his pictures, you can just see all of it. It's really interesting.
But he's very plain looking, so I wouldn't be surprised
if you'd seen a picture of him that just didn't recognize him.
I'm looking at him now.
He doesn't look super familiar, but I mean,
I kind of have a go-to that either Michael Shannon
or Sam Rockwell should play everybody.
Right.
And I could see Sam Rockwell gussied up here
a little bit as Henry Ford.
What about Danny McBride?
Yeah.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha through the fans out there. Sure, I was more of Vice Principal's fan. That was great too. Walton Goggins, he should play him.
Get him in there.
There you go, maybe they could just trade off
halfway through the movie.
Yeah, and see who f-bombs better.
So let's get this started, yeah.
Let's get this started in here.
All right, well if we're gonna talk about Henry Ford,
who by the way, I feel like we
don't need some big whopping intro, but I think a lot of people recognize Henry Ford
as the founder of the Ford Motor Company and not the inventor of the automobile, but certainly
the gentleman who made the automobile ubiquitous, affordable kind of thing for the common person.
Yeah, he's also strongly associated with the assembly line,
which he did not invent, but he just like the automobile,
he definitely like made it a thing.
And in doing these things, like normalizing the assembly line
and car ownership really had a huge impact on history,
especially the history of America.
For sure. Shall we talk about where he was born or you want to skip that? really had a huge impact on history, especially the history of America.
For sure. Shall we talk about where he was born
or you wanna skip that?
No, I mean, he was born in Dearborn, Michigan.
What's next?
That was in 1863, July 30th to William and Mary Ford.
And his pops was an Irish immigrant farmer
and his mom was a homemaker.
Had a bunch of siblings and this is something that you can put a pin in.
It's kind of very, seems very key to his life,
or at least his formative years,
is that he went to one of those kind of old school,
one room school houses, until he was 17 years old.
It was literally old school.
Yeah, very old school.
But it seemed to be a big deal to him as we'll see later.
Yeah, for sure.
Um, so just kind of skipping ahead a little bit.
He, like Rudolph Diesel was fascinated by engines from a very early age and was
like, I want to build one of those.
Um, along the way before he got to the point of building things like cars and
everything, he tried his own hand at farming, like his old man.
He got married to a woman named Clara, who he would stay married to for the rest of his
life.
And he got a job with Thomas Edison at Thomas Edison's, I believe it's Menlo Park complex,
and had his own little shop and everything, and was very interested in trying to create a gasoline engine after reading an article
in American Machinist, which is now known as Hustler.
I'm not gonna say is it true.
Can you imagine what a transformation that would be?
I think one of the interesting things
about his early life though is that, and just for some reason this strikes me as hysterical, is that he had some horse riding accidents when he was a kid.
And I kind of was like, you know what, I want to get rid of those things.
Like those are dangerous and we shouldn't be riding them or using them for work and that seemed to be one of
the strange childhood drives to start working with machinery.
Yeah, it is very strange.
It's really not at all surprising, I guess, really,
if you think about it that his skills at building cars,
his desire and drive to build cars,
is what he built his career on.
Like, like very much so.
Like he built a few cars, especially the first
one called the quadricycle.
It was so named because it looked like two
bicycles parked next to each other.
Yeah.
And he built this thing, like I think he and his
friends built the parts they needed or else they
stripped other things like steam engines of parts
and really like built this thing from scratch.
And then he would ride it around town
and caught the attention of some very wealthy people
in Detroit, in particular the mayor named William Mayberry
who became his first real investor and was like,
you need to build more of these
and we're gonna sell a bunch of them.
So together in 1899 was it,
they formed the Detroit Motor Company.
This was Henry Ford's first car company,
his first attempt.
Yeah, his first couple of attempts at car companies
and bringing a car that actually could be mass produced
and sell on the market were not successful.
This one folded about a year later.
He got investors for the Henry Ford Company next. That also failed to bring about a car that he could sell to people. But
kind of interestingly that that company went on to become once Ford was kind of
shown the exit.
The Cadillac automobile company.
Yeah.
I looked up, I was always like, what is Cadillac named after?
It's named after the founder of Detroit, Antoine de la Moth Cadillac, who established
what would become Detroit in 1701.
So there's where Cadillac's named after for anybody who was wondering.
Yeah.
Maybe we should do a show in Caddy's at some point.
Okay.
I'm not a big car guy, but the caddy's iconic.
Oh yeah, for sure.
I mean, at the very least, OutKast loves it.
Right.
And the thing he did next was, you know,
he was always trying to raise money
and always had kind of a love-hate relationship
with investors.
Yeah.
Because he was like, you know, I need their money,
but that's kind of all
they're good for otherwise they just metal in my creative genius. So he said
about racing cars to kind of drum up publicity and investor interest and
that's what happened when he started winning races with two cars the Aero and
the 999 which is look these things, they're super cool looking. And that led to some investors,
most notably a guy named Alexander Malcomson.
Yeah, so just like building the quadricycle
and riding it around,
like setting the land speed record
in one of the race cars he built,
that attracted Malcomson too.
And Malcomson, this time it stuck.
Malcomson helped Ford launch the Ford Motor Company,
which may ring a bell,
because it was established in 1903.
And get this, it's still around today over 120 years later.
It sure is.
So I guess you could say this one was a success,
starting with the Model A,
which started selling, I don't know, like hotcakes,
but selling well enough in 1905
to keep the company afloat.
They were building about 25 of them a day,
had about 300 people working for them.
Not bad.
And started over like a five-year-ish period
releasing, you know, different models indicated by a different model letter.
Did you look any of these up, the C, the F, the N, the B, and the K?
I did. Those B and the Ks were the more luxury models,
and they're just gorgeous automobiles.
I mean, they're absolutely amazing, even still today.
And then if you look at the more, like, reasonably priced cars,
like the Model C and the F and the N,
they're basically just like open-air buggies with a motor in them.
Which is, I mean, that's what 1905 and 1907
and eight cars were in a lot of ways.
But that B and that K, they're just something extra special.
It's really, I'm not a car guy at all
and I find those alluring for sure.
Yeah, I think we're kind of the same.
Like we're not big car dudes,
but if you see something like that
or the one that the guy did the first
cross-country road trip in. Yeah.
Like I'm able to be knocked out by a car.
You just go vroom, vroom.
So you said that he had a love hate relationship
with investors.
I would posit that he had a use hate relationship with them.
Good point.
To Henry Ford, he was the visionary designing
and building cars.
Malcomson gave him some money and was getting money in return.
He got his thing.
That was their arrangement.
Malcomson was saying, hey, you're making all these like reasonably priced cars.
Forget that.
We need to be focusing on luxury cars.
And Henry Ford bristled with his back turned at his workshop desk and resolved right then and there that he would either murder
Alexander Malcomson or force him out of the company.
And he ended up going with the latter.
That's right.
In 1906, he had Malcomson successfully pushed out and not murdered.
He launched the Model T in 1908.
And this was, you know, the Model T is an iconic legendary automobile because this was
finally the one that had that perfect balance of a little bell and whistle action, but something
that was easy to fix.
It was, it held up well.
It was, and it was affordable for the for the common person which kind of
Submitted him as you know a man of the people it was an enormous
Like achievement the model t was it sold for like eight hundred and fifty bucks when it first came out in 1908
That was the highest price that was ever charged from what I can tell that's about thirty thousand dollars today
So it was roughly equivalent to like a Honda
Civic or like a Subaru legacy or something like that.
Right.
At the time, all other cars that were being built
were luxury cars and they were going for two to
$3,000.
So anywhere from like 70 to a hundred thousand
plus dollars to buy a car.
Now, all of a sudden this guy's selling them for
30,000, the equivalent of $30,000 and car
ownership just boomed from there.
You said they were building 25 cars a day in 1905.
By 1913, they were selling or building 189,000 of them
a year, which I haven't done the math,
but that's a lot more than 25 a day.
Well, yeah, and good job on not doing math.
Thank you.
First of all.
You say I speak for myself and all listeners.
And this is a direct result of his innovation of the assembly line.
Like we said kind of at the beginning, a lot of people think he invented the car.
Not true. Invented the assembly line also not true
There were assembly lines at other
Factories like bicycle factories and stuff. Oh, yeah, there were conveyor belts used in
Farming and like cattle operations and stuff like that candy factories
Candy factories. Well put a pin in that actually. But he actually combined those two things
in a way that no one had before,
where he was literally bringing the work to the people.
They would stand in one spot.
That conveyor belt would bring along the thing they needed
to work on or finish or tinker with or whatever,
or inspect.
First it was a rope and then it was like a chain assembly.
And then it led to definitely some
I Love Lucy type moments.
I mean, that was, first of all,
the workers didn't like it at all.
They thought it was really boring,
but it also at times was like,
I'm not done with the thing that's now left me.
And that was a big problem
when you had to stop the assembly line.
Yeah, for sure.
Because before these people were like
part of an army assembling a car.
They didn't just make this one cog
over and over and over again.
And like you said, it got very boring.
It was very repetitive.
And the turnover rate for employees at Ford
by 1913 was at 370%.
And that's just churning.
That's a really high turnover rate
if that number doesn't immediately present itself
as such to you.
Well, for sure.
Here's another stat of 370% doesn't mean much to you.
He was hiring 53,000 people every year
to fill 14,000 jobs.
Oh my God, wow.
And which was no good, you know, that's never good for a company.
But that also, that assembly line brought the price down on that Model T. I think you
said it would be like 30 grand in today dollars.
By 1912, they brought that cost down to what would be about $9,000 plus change in today's money.
I think in 1912 it was $525, by 1916 it was $345.
So it went down from $30,000 to $16,000 to about $9,000 in today's dollars.
So wow, that's impressive.
One of the things that was the result of that,
that streamlining of costs and the reduction
in price was Henry Ford came up with an idea
to keep workers around.
He said, how about this?
You trade your boredom for more money.
And workers said, all right, I'll hear you out.
And so Henry Ford came up with the $5 workday.
If you worked at Ford, you made $5 a day at least.
And that at the time is equal to about $1,100 a week here.
I think, what is that?
50?
$154 a day into day dollars.
Okay. But times like seven days a week, basically. Eventually six. So it was a pretty good wage.
And people were blown away by it, so much so that Ford was able to basically use it as a PR campaign
too. It would basically be like, I'm paying $5 and I'm characterizing it as profit sharing because I take
care of my workers.
And this really helped establish his reputation
from the outset as like a man of the people, a
populace who cared about factory workers, which is
not true.
True.
To put that in perspective, when I first started
working as a PA in the film industry,
I made 100 bucks a day working at least 12 hour days.
Wow.
They were working, he actually shortened their workday
to eight hours a day at $154 a day,
so that ain't bad at all.
No, it's not.
So that really handled that,
reduced that turnover rate, It got it under control.
Productivity started to stabilize.
I mean, it proved that if you treat employees,
at the very least pay them what they're worth,
people will work harder for you.
It's just a really good way to run a company,
rather than squeezing every last dime that you can
out of as few people as you can.
Henry Ford kind of proved that that was not the way to go.
That's right, but it came with some catches.
In 1914, he came up with the sociological department
of his company, and that was a group who,
over the course of about seven years, would go around and come to your
house and do little home visits and say like, oh, I
see alcohol in the house.
And it's kind of a pigsty.
So you don't qualify to get that $5 a day.
If you took in a border, like, looks like you're
renting a room to someone.
Sorry, you don't qualify.
These are all, you know, pretty vast overreaches, you know, when you to someone, sorry you don't qualify. These are all pretty vast overreaches
when you think about today's standards.
Some of them were pretty good though,
if you had a domestic violence rap against you,
you didn't qualify, so good for him for that I guess.
Sure.
And today, I mean yes, that would be crazy
if somebody did that because instead employers
just spy on you through
your work computer rather than dropping by your
house actually, because that'd be too obvious,
you know?
Yeah, that's untoward.
So I think we talked about this in the, um,
Fordlandia episode where like the sociological
department was really keeping an eye on people.
Um, and, and a lot of ways you're like, uh, that's
just insane.
And it was, there's another like kind of facet to it that is worth pointing out
that most of these workers whose houses were being visited, visited, lived in
Ford housing that was built right near the plant.
Um, and I believe they got subsidized housing.
So based on what I know about Ford, if he paid for something, even a little bit,
he owned it.
So he felt totally emboldened to just send people
into your house to see if you were drinking or not,
and then that would affect your employment.
He owned you.
He was paying you a really good wage.
He owned you, he owned your house, he owned your family.
That's just how he saw things.
He could buy anything with money,
and he just behaved that way as well.
Yeah, totally.
Should we take a break?
Yeah.
All right, so we're gonna,
we've talked about his career up until this point.
We're gonna take a little slight turn
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Stuff you should know
All right, as promised we're gonna talk a bit about the man's personal life We mentioned that he married his wife Clara Bryant in 1998
And they stayed married and you, had a very close partnership
as married people go.
But all while that was going on, all the while,
he was having an affair.
I mean, I don't think you'll see this printed
on any Ford Motor Company official histories or anything.
But he had a long standing affair
with a woman named Evangeline Cote and
Eventually would get one of his friends perhaps even his personal driver
To his guy named Ray Dollinger to marry her
because he
It appears as though he had a son with her named John and was like hey
Buddy, you got you gotta marry this lady
and make it look like that's your son,
and the whole time we're gonna be having
this kind of secret affair.
Yeah, that was the setup.
And again, like he paid for Evangeline's house
and Evangeline and Ray's house.
Apparently they had like at least two or three estates,
one of which was just like a couple miles down the road
from where Ford lived with Clara.
He even built a secret staircase that he could
use that was away from prying eyes and went
directly up to Evangeline's bedroom.
That's creepy.
And in the seventies, John Ford, who Henry Ford
spent an inordinate amount of time with if it wasn't his actual son.
He later in the seventies, like, like, I think he
wrote a memoir and said like, yeah, this guy's my,
he was my father for like that.
He was my father.
Sorry, if you don't want to hear it, that's how it was.
And I think still it was never, it's still never,
no one ever took a paternity test,
Evangeline never talked to the press about it.
Like, it's just not officially confirmed,
but in every single way besides officially, it's confirmed.
Yeah, for sure.
During this time, he also had a son named Edsel.
He would famously name a very failed automobile after.
Probably on purpose.
Yeah.
He was born in 1893.
He was a good dad for about a minute.
But once Edsel got to be a little bit older, they did not have a very good relationship.
He thought he was kind of a weakling.
He thought it was kind of a weakling. He thought it was soft. He did give him a job, and he would humiliate him
and belittle him.
He would even back him to be the president, his son,
to be the president of the Ford Motor Company.
But just in kind of like, he didn't have any real teeth
in that job, because Dad was still running the show.
Yeah, a really widespread anecdote
about how Henry Ford
treated Edsel.
Edsel could not make a step as president of Ford Motor
Company without his dad's approval.
And if he did, there was trouble.
And in one case, the administrative offices
were starting to get overcrowded.
So he had a new wing built for it, new offices built. And he didn't pass it by his dad first.
So when his dad found out, his dad halted work on it.
By this time they dug out the foundation and Edzell said, okay, sorry about that.
I'll just fill the ground back in.
And Henry Ford said, no, you won't.
You will leave that there and you have to walk past it every day on your way to work.
And it will remind you of your humiliation, essentially.
That's how Edzell was treated by his father. walk past it every day on your way to work. And it will remind you of your humiliation, essentially.
That's how Edzel was treated by his father.
It's like, it's like Henry Ford had a rich kid, just by definition, but hated rich kids, like kids that were born rich, right?
And he treated his son that way.
And from what I can tell, his son was not a bad guy and didn't deserve this at all.
No, I mean, he might as well have said, I'm going to leave that hole in the ground as a reminder son was not a bad guy and didn't deserve this at all.
No, I mean, he might as well have said, I'm going to leave that hole in the ground as a reminder of what
a jerk father I've been to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's very sad.
Yeah.
It's real sad.
Like he, I mean, it's also, his son died young
in 1943 at age 49.
Uh, I think we talked about this in the Ford
Landia episode too, that he died one of two ways
from stomach cancer or from a bad
reaction to raw milk that his father made him
drink.
Yeah.
Uh, and even as he was sick and dying, Henry
Ford was like, suck it up, you wuss, you know,
stop, stop making such a big deal out of this.
And, uh, as, as it became clear that as it was
very, very sick and actually dying, Henry Ford's like,
oh, okay, I'm going to try to get some doctors out here and get the best of the best.
And they couldn't do anything.
And when Edsel died, he blamed Edsel's doctors.
And then I guess eventually blamed himself, but I don't know how he did that or how that's documented.
Yeah, agreed.
All right.
So back to his career in 1919.
Again, he's tired of the investor sort of getting in his way in his mind.
This is amazing, actually.
He lost a lawsuit that basically said you have to pay out dividends to the Dodge brothers,
two of his biggest investors at the time.
Also his competitors who owned Dodge Motor Company.
The Dodge brothers owned Dodge?
Yeah, can you believe it?
And by that time he was like,
I really wanna control everything.
I wanna be able to build a factory
that basically handles everything but the tires
because the Firestones have that under wraps basically.
And he was friends with Harvey Firestone too, so.
Yeah, for sure.
So he said, all right, here's what I'm gonna do.
I'm gonna announce that I'm leaving the company.
I'm gonna announce that I'm gonna build a better company
that's gonna produce better cars and cheaper cars.
And all the stockholders freaked out
because they were like, if Henry Ford's not at the helm,
this company is gonna go under.
And so they started selling off their
Shares what they did know is they were mostly selling to an investment company that was
Controlled by Henry Ford so he ended up. I mean, I don't I don't know if this is illegal at the time
At the very least it was unethical. Yeah, but he ended up outright owning the Ford Motor Company
Basically by himself with his son and wife
Isn't that amazing? I mean say what you will about the man, but that is one of the
wildest business moves in the history of American business
Wiley's a good
Soft way to sell that I read that when he was when he told when he was told that like the whole plan worked
It was done. He danced a jig in his office.
Well, he loved dancing.
He did.
Yeah.
I guess it's not that surprising.
Yeah.
We didn't mention that cause that'll come up later too.
He had a thing for square dancing and like tried to get his employees to learn square
dancing.
I think we talked about that in the Fordlandia episode too.
It seems like it came up for sure.
I mean, how can you can't talk about Henry Ford
and not talk about his weird love of square dancing.
Well, yeah, I mean, he loved what he loved.
One of the things he did not love was war.
He was an avowed pacifist,
and he spoke out quite publicly.
One of the things he used his recognition and fame for
as a man of the people was to use that to speak out against World War I.
And that was really dicey because the Espionage Act of 1917 was used about 2,000 times. 2,000
people were charged between 1917 and 1920 for speaking out against World War I. So that was
not something that you just did casually. Like it was a big deal that he did that.
Uh, he gave interviews about it.
He chartered a boat to ride to Europe, to try to
advocate for peace.
Uh, it was called the peace ship.
It was not very well received by the press.
He was made fun of, but like he was definitely a pacifist for sure.
But when, when America entered World War I,
he backed it fully.
Yeah, he did the same thing with World War II.
He was against it until Pearl Harbor,
and once America was in these wars,
he didn't just fold his hands and say,
well, you're on your own.
He would, of course, at the government's behest,
transform the Ford Motor Company into building
everything from airplane engines to ambulances
and military personnel vehicles.
And those ambulances would go on to blow up
when they were rear-ended in the 70s,
often with patients in them.
Were they Pintos?
They were close.
So one of the things that Henry Ford was,
in addition to speaking out about pacifism, he spoke
out about a lot of stuff.
Uh, and he was interviewed once.
He was very opinionated, totally convinced that
his opinion was correct, like objectively correct.
From what I can tell.
I think he's a narcissist.
A little bit.
He was interviewed in the Chicago Tribune and he
said, among other things that, um, he basically
hates art and that he quote, among other things, that he basically
hates art and that he, quote, history is bunk, that there's nothing to be learned from history.
We always just need to be looking forward.
And so the same year, 1916, the Chicago Tribune, the paper he was interviewed in, also published
an editorial calling him an ignorant idealist and an anarchistic enemy of the nation. And so he said, you know what, that's libel and I'm going to sue you.
And it went to trial in 1913 and he won, he won six cents, which is less than $5 today.
That's how much he won from the Chicago Tribune.
That's how much he was awarded.
But even worse, he was just really exposed as an
ignorant person, um, on the stand.
He was like quizzed about things like history and
stuff and just completely got stuff wrong.
And all of the papers, including the Tribune
published all this stuff.
So it didn't really make him look good.
Yeah.
It was kind of like, I'll take your test.
And then he, afterward he's like, I shouldn't have taken this test.
Especially in front of everybody.
Yeah, under oath.
There was also a rumor that he might have been illiterate.
I don't think that was probably true, and it stems from the fact that he refused to read aloud.
But who knows, he may have had some form of dyslexia or learning disorder.
Like, we just don't know.
So speculating in 2024 is a little, I don't know.
I'm not a big fan.
It makes it pretty ironic that one of the things
he collected were McGuffey readers,
which were 19th century textbooks.
Like he collected them.
That's a strange thing for a person
who's not literate to do.
Yeah, like elementary school textbooks.
They were for kids.
Sure.
So maybe that made more sense, they were for kids. Sure.
So maybe that made more sense, I don't know.
Maybe, he's like, yeah, I collect these, I'm definitely not teaching myself from them.
So he didn't like the press, not just because of this, but he was just a lightning rod for good press and bad press.
But he got fed up with it, eventually was like, you know what, I'm going to start my own newspaper. So he bought one, the Dearborn Independent in 1919, and he, you know, basically controlled it
and was like, here's what I'm going to do. I'm not sure if everyone knows about my anti-Semitic views.
So I'm going gonna start making this newspaper
write lots and lots of articles
about how Jewish people are in control of the world
and the finances of the world
and are responsible for everything bad,
including these wars that are happening
and jazz music that is leading to drug use.
So in all, they ran about 91 stories in the paper
that he would eventually collect into a four volume book
called The International Jew,
which he distributed like a half a million copies
to people for free.
Purposely never copyrighted it
so that it could be republished.
And it still is, it's a huge,
it's like a bookshelf must
for white supremacists still today.
Yeah.
The fact that none of the stuff he ever said in
it was ever proved or shown to be true or correct,
um, has no bearing on that whatsoever.
And I don't know if this is the origin of it,
but he certainly perpetuated if he didn't
create it, the idea that Jewish bankers
secretly ran the world.
Yeah.
Which is still a trope today among white
supremacists and racists of all stripes.
One of these articles, I think it was about Jews
taking over the American farming industry,
mentioned one guy in particular, a Jewish
activist who was a union activist trying to
organize farm workers named Aaron
Sapiro.
And he was named personally in this article.
So he's like, oh, you like libel suits?
Here's one for you too.
And he sued him for libel.
Yeah, he did.
And I think he ended up settling out of court, right?
He did.
And part of the settlement was that he was required to make a public apology to Jewish people,
which he took the opportunity to make what seemed like a sincere apology,
like he'd seen the error of his ways.
But apparently privately, he had all the same views.
And if you want to know anything about Henry Ford and his antisemitism, he accepted
an award from Hitler in 1938.
And this was the culmination of a long time
mutual admiration between the two.
Hitler cited Henry Ford as a inspiration
in Mein Kampf.
And, uh, I think in 1931, and a reporter from
the Detroit news interviewed Hitler in his office and noted that
there was a huge portrait of Henry Ford behind
Hitler at his desk.
And Hitler said, I regard him as my inspiration.
So they definitely admired one another's
views and work.
Yeah.
I think that's enough said on that, right?
Sure. It speaks for itself. Yeah, I think that's enough said on that, right? Sure. It speaks for itself.
Oh yeah, for sure. All right, should we take a break and come back with a little more career?
Yeah. All right, we'll be right back.
Hey, I'm Gianna Predenti. And I'm Jeme Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
When you're just starting out in your career, you have a lot of questions.
Like how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed?
Or can I negotiate a higher salary
if this is my first real job?
Girl, yes.
Each week, we answer your unfiltered work questions.
Think of us as your work besties
you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer,
we bring in experts who do,
like resume specialist Morgan Sanner.
The only difference between the person
who doesn't get the job and the person who gets the job
is usually who applies.
Yeah, I think a lot about that quote. What is it? Like you miss 100% of the shots you never take?
Yeah, rejection is scary, but it's better than you rejecting yourself.
Together, we'll share what it really takes to thrive in the early years of your career.
Without sacrificing your sanity or sleep.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
For decades, the mafia had New York City in a stranglehold
with law enforcement seemingly powerless to intervene.
It uses terror to extort people.
But the murder of Carmichael Lonti
marked the beginning of the end,
sparking a chain of events that would ultimately dismantle
the most powerful crime organization in American history.
It sent the message to them
that we can prosecute these people.
Discover how a group of young prosecutors
took on the mafia,
and with the help of law enforcement,
brought down its most powerful figures.
These bosses on the commission had no idea what was coming their way from the federal
government.
From Wolf Entertainment and iHeart Podcasts, this is Law & Order, Criminal Justice System.
Listen to Law & Order, Criminal Justice System on theHeartRadio 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. Turr, 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
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And don't worry, we promise to avoid any black holes.
Most of the time.
["Stuff You Should Know"]
All right, Chuck.
So you talked about him wanting to build like a plant, what's called a
vertically integrated plant where ore and raw materials are brought in and
everything, but the, the car's tires are built and assembled there.
Right.
Like if you have something like this, you are extraordinarily powerful
in whatever industry you're in.
And he built it. It was a 2,000 acre plant called the River Rouge plant.
And I think it opened in 1918.
And I mean, it was extraordinarily successful and just launched the company into like essentially a monopoly.
Even though there were other car companies, nobody could compete
with Ford to the point where it was like, you know, he might as well have had a monopoly
on it.
He was just so far ahead of everybody else by this time.
Yeah, for sure.
And part of the success of that plant was due to the fact that he kind of caved a little
bit on releasing cars that had some bells and whistles.
He, like, you, like I mentioned earlier,
he wasn't the biggest fan of those
and kind of like the car for the people,
but sales were declining in the mid-1920s,
so he said, all right, the Model T has done its work,
but I think we need something a little more luxurious.
So the Model A was released in 1927,
and they also sold a lot of those.
They did.
That's another pretty car too.
It's like the official car of like gangsters with Tommy guns
who rob banks and like run along
and jump on the running boards on the side.
Yeah, yeah.
That's that kind of car.
It's a pretty car.
You can hang off the side of that thing with a Tommy gun
like no other car.
Right.
So I said earlier that Henry Ford had an enormous impact on American culture, American history.
One of the ironic things or funny things, it's a little ticklish, is that he despised
the consumer culture that he helped create.
He felt that as people got more money in their pocket, they looked to spend it in increasingly amoral ways,
and that the country was turning away from the ideals
of his childhood, what he considered true America,
what he considered the point of life,
family, square dancing, anti-Semitism.
These three pillars, right?
He saw people turning away from this, right?
And so I think he railed against it for sure,
but him personally, he took that as an opportunity
to kind of like fade into this childhood fantasy,
this idealized version of the way life was
in his childhood.
And he did this by building something called
Greenfield Village.
I thought you were gonna say Celebration Florida.
I know, it bears a striking resemblance.
I even wrote, it's like Celebration Florida.
Yeah, it's also a little bit like his version
of Colonial Williamsburg.
He started developing this in 1919
when he restored his original house.
And about 10 years later, it would open to the public
as sort of like a Williamsburg of his time.
It was like a living history village.
There was a museum there, still is.
He would basically, like Colonial Williamsburg would do,
he would say like, hey, this is when things were the best like when I was a kid totally definitely
a narcissist yeah I mentioned right this is when things were were most awesome
and here's what it was like back then here's what the buildings look like you
can come and walk around the village you can it's even got like it functioned as
a real place where people live there was was that school in that one room schoolhouse modeled after the one that
he loved growing up.
They had a full-time dance instructor who was teaching square dancing among other
things, and he was told to CEO, he was like, you need to get down there to
Greenfield Village, I've signed you up for Tuesdays at seven.
Right.
Can you imagine?
No.
So yeah, it's still there today, right?
It's still living open today.
I've never been, it does sound interesting.
Um, in addition to the look back at history,
which is ironic again, because he said history's bunk.
Um, it was also a way to preserve the great
technological innovations of Thomas Edison.
He took buildings from Menlo Park and moved them to
Greenfield village.
So he, he assembled his idealized version of what innovations of Thomas Edison. He took buildings from Menlo Park and moved them to Greenfield Village.
So he, he assembled his idealized version of
what a town would have been like in his childhood.
And he just spent more and more time there and
just kind of moving further and further away
from the company.
And as he spent less time at the company, he
had to, somebody had to run the company.
So he grudgingly had Edzel running things.
He had another guy named Charles Sorenson
who ran the plant, that huge River Rouge plant.
And then he had another guy, a real scumbag
named Harry Bennett, who we've talked about
multiple times, who ran the Ford Service Department,
which was the Ford Goon Squad, essentially.
Yeah, and Goon Squad meaning they,
he wasn't a big fan of unionization
and workers organizing.
So Bennett would go in and do the heavy work.
A lot of paranoia created,
a lot of literal punishment
for just dumb little infractions,
saying they couldn't have bathroom breaks,
you get 15 minutes for lunch,
I'm gonna spy on the CEOs,
and if you come around here,
like maybe from the UAW, the United Auto Workers,
and you start talking about organizing,
we're gonna literally, physically beat you down
and run you out of here.
Yeah, if you read about what's called
the Battle of the Overpass in 1937,
it's, again, I
think we talked about that before too, but the,
the, the Ford Service Department led by Harry
Bennett, who was in the mix, like beat these
people so badly, they were thrown down flights
of concrete stairs.
When they were knocked down, they would be picked
up again so they could be beaten further.
Some of the women that were there were roughed up.
It was a bad jam.
And then they chased the reporters down to try to get their notebooks,
try to get the film out of their cameras.
And only because a couple of reporters, one of them ran five miles to a police station
to keep his negatives intact or his plates intact.
And another one managed to hide it, hide his plates just in time and gave him fake plates
or fake film essentially to go and break.
And this stuff got published and it was totally contrary to Ford's version of what had happened
and it really gave a huge black eye to the Ford Motor Company because you just didn't
– that was just beyond the pale.
Even for the 1930s, like union busters, right?
So it actually helped pave the way for the UAW to make inroads and start organizing Ford.
And the Ford employees finally, I think five years after the Battle of Overpass, were given
the opportunity to vote whether to unionize and they said, yes, union, yes, si se puede.
All right, so we're at the end.
He had not been, you know,
some people say he was still calling the shots
kind of close to the end.
He was in his 70s by the time Bennett
was doing his strong arm work,
so there are people that say he wasn't super aware of that. Other people like, you know, one of the top folks, Sorenson, said, no,
he was doing exactly what Ford wanted. But as he got older and older, he obviously started
experiencing health issues. Throughout that last decade, he was just sort of, you know,
declining like we all eventually will. And that means at work as well like not working as much
Had a lot of health issues
Especially his memory and but he still wouldn't like officially give up control
Or just say I'm just gonna go hide away from the public right we talked about World War two
And you know he activism there in there in the 1930s and 40s.
Also was not a big fan of FDR and the New Deal in the 1930s, so he was not shutting
up about that either.
He would have loved social media.
If he were around today, he would be huge on social media.
Yeah, absolutely.
We mentioned Edsel died in 1943 and for a very brief time after Ford took over the company again as president,
but it was, you know, he shouldn't have been running a company at that point.
No, one anecdote is that he would fire employees and then, you know, a day or two later ask why they weren't at the meeting because he'd forgotten.
And so as more and more of this stuff mounted, the executives were like, you, you have to retire. Please just let us handle this.
We can do this.
And he finally caved in 1945.
Um, two years later, he would be dead April 7th,
1947.
And I think his last day on earth really kind of
illustrates him.
He spent the morning with his mistress, Evangeline,
and he died at night when he had an aneurysm while
he was fluffing his wife, Claireangeline, and he died at night when he had an aneurysm while he was fluffing
his wife, Claire's pillow at bedtime.
That's not funny, but the way you put it was funny.
I mean, there's no other way to put it.
I could have said it in like Italian or something,
but then no one would have understood what I said
except for our Italian listeners.
I don't think we have Italian listeners
because you've alienated them all.
Oh, man.
You got anything else?
No.
I'm looking for the compliment sandwich in that one,
but I don't think it's got them.
The compliment, the last part is that you do a really great
Italian impression, regardless.
And everyone loves it.
You said you had nothing else, right?
So that means it's time for listener mail.
Yeah, this is about the just released episode that, part of which was about this mystery song
from the 19... it was 80s, right? Yeah, 80s. Yeah.
Hey guys, my name is Nicole and I was just listening to this episode about the most
mysterious song on the internet. I've been listening to it now for about 45 minutes and a couple of things stood out.
Disclaimer, I am German.
Born and raised during the 80s and have been living here almost 18 years now.
Given the fact that I grew up during the time this song was discovered, some things have
become rather apparent to me.
I am sure I'm not the first one to say this, nor will I be the one cracking the code, but
I find it very interesting.
I'm still working on deciphering the lyrics and I have about half of it down and here are my humble observations.
Number one, the song is most likely written and recorded by East Germans given the fact of how dark and depressing the lyrics are.
Two, it is somewhat difficult to make some of the lyrics out and some words have been used in the wrong form. Also very interesting.
Number three, I find this utterly fascinating and it's definitely a rabbit hole guys. And number four, I wonder if this song was accidentally
played, smuggled in by someone unbeknownst to the radio station. Since it
isn't professionally recorded, I found this to be very likely to be the case. At
any rate, thank you for making great shows that keep me on my toes and inspire me to think outside the box.
This one in particular will be a great one, especially because I had never heard
of it before today, and that is from Nicole. Awesome, thanks a lot Nicole.
Thanks for listening to us over there in Germany. That's awesome. And if you want
to be like Nicole and send us your thoughts and observations on an episode
that we've done, we love that kind of thing.
You can wrap it up, spank it on the bottom, and send it off to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you listen to your favorite shows.
I'm Kari Champion, and this is season four of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry,
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
Every great player needs a foil.
I know I'll go down to history.
People are talking about women's basketball
just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports.
Listen to the making of a rivalry.
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Guess what, Will? What's that, Mango?
I've been trying to write a promo for our podcast, Part-Time Genius, but even though
we've done over 250 episodes, we don't really talk about murders or cults.
I mean, we did just cover the Illuminati of cheese, so I feel like that makes us
pretty edgy. We also solve mysteries like how Chinese is your Chinese food and how
do dollar stores make money?
And then, of course, can you game a dog show?
So what you're saying is everyone should be listening.
Listen to Part-Time Genius on the iHeart Radio app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I am Lacey Lamar.
And I'm also Lacey Lamar.
Just kidding, I'm Amber Revin.
Okay everybody, we have exciting news to share.
We're back with season two of the Amber and Lacey,
Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's
Big Money Players Network.
This season we make new friends, deep dive into my steamy DMs, answer your listener questions
and more.
The more is punch each other.
Listen to the Amber and Lacey Lacey and Amber show on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Just listen, okay?
Or Lacey gets it.
Do it.