Stuff You Should Know - How Bras Work
Episode Date: May 21, 2020Bras are loved and hated, sometimes at the same time. But as difficult and restrictive as they can be, they rescued women from a much cruel contraption: corsets. The question remains, though, do women... need bras at all? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
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If you do, you've come to the right place
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
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Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
And it's just us again.
It's just us.
We've lost Jerry.
I'm in the studio, like I was on the last one,
but it's still a ghost studio.
There's no one here.
Sure, except for Tommy Chong and the record player, right?
Sure.
Good, let's leave it at that.
We said that we have somebody poised to scratch the needle
off the record several episodes ago.
Yeah, I remember that.
It was Tommy Chong, whose job it was to do that now.
That's right, good callback.
Thank you.
Should we talk bras?
Yeah, we're talking bras, man,
which I appreciate it when we do stuff like this,
episodes like this,
because we have to try harder because we're men, you know?
Sure.
The usual.
It's the only time we have to try harder in life.
Sadly, that is kind of true.
But we haven't shied away from topics
that have very little to do with us, like corsets.
We did one on how corsets work.
Do you remember that?
Did we?
We totally did, a whole episode on corsets.
Geez.
We did one on female puberty.
Yeah, foot binding.
Yeah, we've done a lot of them.
So this is just one and the same.
A three is a lot when it comes to this kind of stuff.
Yeah, no, I'm just kidding.
And we did mention doing one on menstruation
not too long ago and we got a bunch of supportive emails
saying like, yes, guys, please, please do that.
Like there's no reason why you shouldn't.
I've been menstruating for 50 years
and I still don't understand it.
Please explain.
Yeah, exactly.
So actually we have not gotten that email,
although we wouldn't know if we had, you know?
Yeah, because our email server's down.
Sorry if you've been bounced, everyone.
Yeah, we're working on it.
Yep.
So we're talking bras, which is short for brazier,
which doesn't have a definite origin as far as we know.
We think that it came about in the 20th century,
early 20th century.
I think it first appeared in print in 1907
or something like that.
And that in French, it means one of two things.
It means either arm covering,
which is I think derived from like medieval armor,
French medieval armor, don't know.
And then the other thing I saw was a child's vest,
which that to me is just lovely.
If that's what they're trying to say with the bra,
that it's like a child's size vest
that you wear over your breasts, I love that idea.
You wanna know something funny?
Yes.
For the first 10 minutes researching this,
this was put together by our pal, Dave Ruse.
I kept thinking, why is Ruse,
why does he keep talking about brasseries?
Why does he keep talking about quaint,
little French restaurants?
That's funny.
It's very close.
It looks like brazier.
It does.
Well, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it does.
I think if that I was just a little further toward the end,
we would be talking about casual French restaurants.
The TGI Fridays of France.
Well, that's better than my experience.
For the first 30 minutes,
I was researching nothing but car bras.
God, the Le Bras, remember those?
No.
I remember the car.
I think there was a Le Bras, which was one of the big
popular models at the time for like porches
and stuff like that.
I don't remember that at all.
You know, my dad very stupidly bought a Porsche
when I was in high school.
Oh, no, with that food truck money?
With that big public school teacher money.
He went out and bought a Porsche and surprised my mom
and the rest of the family with a sweet Porsche 911.
Like a new one?
That no one was allowed to like breathe on.
No, it wasn't new.
Doesn't matter.
But he very quickly went out and this is very my dad.
And like the next week he had like the Porsche Isod,
the Porsche glasses, the Porsche hat.
And we didn't have that for very long.
I think I drove it one time like around the block
and he was like, and they were not fun cars to drive.
They were very difficult to drive.
Yeah, yeah, they're all about being as one
with the road and if the road's not so great
then it's not very fun.
Yeah, but I will say piggybacking on this story.
I've been watching the TV show Red Oaks.
Have you ever seen it?
I have never even heard of it.
I hadn't either.
It was an Amazon show that ran for three seasons
about sort of like Caddy Shacky.
It's a kid who works at a tennis club in the 80s
and a very, very 80s show.
And the drug dealer drives this really sweet Porsche 928.
Remember those?
Is that the pointy one?
It looks like a Lotus Esprit.
Yeah, well, it's yeah, the risky business car.
Okay, I never saw that movie.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh dude, you need to see Risky Business, great movie.
I've got a list going.
It's really good, it's really good.
But anyway, like the 911 gets all the headlines
but that 928 was so sweet and I was like,
man, I wonder what you could get an 80s, 928 for.
I bet it's not that much and it looked it up.
How much?
Well, there was a range, like you can get one
that's in not great shape for like $12,000
or up to 60 grand for a cherry low mileage one.
Right, I think that's pretty much the same
with all vintage cars.
I was looking at Pinto station wagons before.
Then we're at different ends of the spectrum.
There was about four or five mint condition
Pinto station wagons in existence that are really expensive.
The rest are exactly what you would expect.
That's funny.
So we're talking bras today, obviously.
We just wanted to get rid of anybody
who might benefit from listening to this.
So we talked about Porsches and stuff.
Yeah, so the bras, the modern bra has only been around
for about 150 years and Dave makes a really good point
of the fact that this thing that's only been around
for 150 years has been one of the most complicated garments
in the history of the world, I think.
Yeah, not necessarily in its designer manufacture,
but in its relation to society as a whole.
Yeah, totally.
So you've got apparently a complete another lack of bras,
but as women started to play sports a little more,
it was okay for them to wear bras.
I think in the 20th century.
And in fact, it was a woman who invented the sports bra
to women actually, I think in 1977,
they invented what was called the jog bra
from two jock straps that they put together.
But it's kind of a funny, cute little origin story,
but they ended up like revolutionizing sports.
Like women were allowed to play sports.
I think title nine had been passed a couple of years before
this, but the fact is you couldn't play sports
because there wasn't much support out there for you.
So to invent the sports bra was tantamount
to introducing women in practice into sports.
It's pretty huge.
Yeah, it is.
And the history of the bra also incorporates fashion.
It incorporates societal norms and how they change.
So did the bra, how women changed over the years
and their own rights over their own comfort
and their own fashion, taking that back.
And it really kind of everything in between.
The bra is a very complicated garment and undergarment.
It is, it is very complicated.
What I was heartened to see though
is that today apparently, and for the last several years,
it's been all about comfort and realness
and finding like a bra that fits.
And apparently I was very surprised to find this,
that that has not been the norm,
that especially in America at least,
bra makers have made like X number of sizes.
And if your breasts didn't happen to fit the bra,
that was on you.
There's something wrong with your body
because these are the standard sizes
and this is what we're selling.
And so women have for a very long time had,
a lot of women have had bras that just do not fit them
because they just can't find them in America.
And that's kind of led to this revolution in bra making
and also bra sizing that has allowed for women
to have much better, much more comfortable fits with bras.
And I'm just glad for that.
Yeah, me too.
The average American woman supposedly owns six bras.
Okay.
There are officially,
there are 20 different styles of bras that you can buy.
And there's this great quote here.
It's from a book called Uplift Colon,
The Bra in America by Jane Farrell Beck and Colleen Gao.
And this is sort of really pinpoints the,
what you're trying to do with a bra
and why it's so tough to get a great fit
in one that really works for everybody. Brasseries, oh wait.
Braziers must do more than fit a multitude of bodies.
They must accommodate the same body
as it changes through the monthly cycle and the life cycle.
They must provide for movement of the torso
and arms in many directions
without chafing or binding without slipping out of position.
And as if that were not enough,
braziers must retain their own structure
throughout multiple wearings and launderings
must not abrade in contact with clothing
must remain as a rule inconspicuous beneath the outer clothing
while harmonizing with a desired silhouette
and must be priced to sell to many customers.
There's no wonder that hundreds of attempts have been made
to design the ideal breast supporter
over the past 140 years.
Yeah.
That says it all.
It really does.
It is a lot more complicated than say boxer shorts.
Yeah, those are easy.
So there's also a lot of money to be made in it.
I saw just the sports bra industry alone
is worth like $7 billion a year.
There's a lot of money made from bras.
And so as a result,
about 600 million of them are made every year.
There's about 26,000 different bra patterns in existence.
When you said 20 different styles,
that's like racer back or demi-cup,
that like large category of bra.
As far as like different patterns and types of bras,
there's tens of thousands of them.
Oh, sure.
And each one has a lot of different moving parts.
I saw 40 different parts from straps,
clasps, underwire, all that stuff.
And that it takes months and months of,
dozens of people working together to create a new bra.
It's not just like a new thing.
So there's a lot of thought and time and effort and money
going into bra production.
And then from what I've seen,
there's virtually an equal amount of time and effort
and thought going into bra purchasing too.
From what I'm seeing,
it's like not the easiest thing in the world to buy a bra
if you want the bra to be one that is your new favorite.
Yeah, did you have any flashbacks of young Josh
while you were researching this
of like Sears catalog type of stuff?
Sure, practicing unhooking bras by wearing them myself.
Or simply, the 80s was a generally more naive moment in time
before the internet, like seeing a lady in a bra
leaning against a tree was a pretty big deal.
Yes, it really was.
In 1983, yeah.
Should we take a break and then dive into the history?
Yeah, I think it's a good idea.
Okay, we'll be right back with
a history of the Brasserie right after this.
One, two, three!
One, two, three!
One, two, three!
God damn it!
One, two, three!
One, two, three!
One, two, three!
One, two, three!
Just get your surface!
One, two, three!
On the podcast, Paydude the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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to the best decade ever.
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Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound, like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
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as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s,
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Stuff you should know.
All right.
Okay, so as everybody knows,
there was a battle between Audubon Titzling
and Philippe Brazier over who invented the bra,
and as the great Betmiddler instructed all of us,
we know who won that battle,
because we all, you wear a brazier, not a Titzling.
Was that a Betmiddler bet?
It was from Beaches.
Oh, I saw that in the 80s when it came out,
and not since then.
I don't think, I've seen it since the 80s either,
but I guess that little part really, really stuck with me.
Yeah.
So the real first patent for the bra was filed in 1863.
Brazier, the word, it wasn't coined till the 20th century,
but that wasn't the first bra.
Dave sent us even a photo with this research,
which was pretty great,
of a Sicilian mosaic called Bikini Girls.
And if you look up Bikini Girls,
well, you're gonna get a lot of results,
but if you look up Sicilian mosaic Bikini Girls,
you will see a mosaic from about 400 to 300 BCE
that shows these young athletic women wearing bikinis,
clearly wearing what looks like a bra or bikini top.
But it's basically exactly
what Pro Beach volleyball players wear today.
Like no joke, it looks exactly like it.
But strapless.
Right, yeah.
I think a lot of them wear strapless stuff too,
and also very short shorts.
Like even with the butterfly cut,
if you look closely,
they have like that cut on the side.
I mean, they look exactly like Pro volleyball players.
And this is 2,400 years ago.
So it seems like they were wearing
what's called an epidesmy or strophium,
depending on whether you speak the Greek or the Latin.
But it's basically like a cloth wrapped around
and then knotted in front
to provide support during athletics.
That's right.
Boom.
So medieval times come along.
There were European physicians who were writing
about something called breast bags.
And there was a medical text from 1300,
the Royal Surgeon in France,
Henri de Mondeville said,
some women insert two bags in their dresses,
adjusted to the breasts fitting tight,
and they put them into them every morning
and fasten them when possible with a matching band.
Not a marching band.
No, that's sort of a bra, a built-in bra.
Sure.
Or a breast bag.
So, just don't say that ever again.
Okay, agreed.
So that's from 1300, right?
And then you would think, okay,
well, the things kind of started hard and fast
from that point on.
And as far as history is concerned,
no, like about 100 years later,
the like all broad technology was abandoned
in favor of the corset.
And that's what we thought for a very long time
until there was a discovery in 2008,
but it wasn't publicized until I think 2012 or 15,
that an archeologist from the University of Innsbruck,
Beatrix Newts,
I guarantee that's how our name is spelled,
or said, she was excavating an Austrian castle,
Langberg Castle, and she found four medieval bras
that were 600 to 700 years old, made of linen.
And do you remember when this like,
this was news, this made the rounds?
I do.
When you looked at this garment,
you're like, that is a bra.
Like it doesn't matter what context you have,
it doesn't matter.
You just show somebody a picture of this
without any prep or anything like that and say,
what is this?
They would say, well, that's a bra.
You'd say, that's right.
It's a 700 year old bra that we didn't know existed.
Like that whole design, we had no idea that it existed
because we thought everything had gone basically from,
I'm sorry to say this one more time,
breast bags to corsets,
and that there was no transition.
But in fact, there was a transition to the modern bra
that was abandoned in favor of the corset,
quite unfortunately, really.
Yeah, and there was even that,
they even found a picture there of a 13 year old boy
with a bra on his head saying he was Mickey Mouse.
That's right.
So that was proof. So we covered the corset,
like you said, in our full length episode.
So you can go listen to that, but very briefly,
corset, the word means corpus in Latin for body.
And women would wear these corsets that were,
they had wood or bone later on that had steel.
And it would basically shape their torso.
It would cinch that waist in
and it would flatten their breast.
And they were very restrictive.
They were very painful and they did actual real damage
to their bodies at times.
Oh yeah, like they had trouble digesting,
had trouble breathing.
You remember, you could train your waist to be,
to stay that small.
We talked a lot about this in the corset episode,
but the big problem with corsets aside from all that
is that they supported the breast from the bottom up.
Yes.
And the thing that really differentiated bras
from everything else up to that point
was that they went the other way.
They used the, they harnessed the power of the shoulder
to hold the breasts up from beneath,
not push them up, but hold them, suspend them,
almost like a pair of breast bags hanging down
over your shoulder.
There you go again.
I can't help myself now.
I've been told not to do something.
These are the great episodes where I just sometimes
like to sit back and watch you dig into
a big giant hole.
Turn into a 13 year old boy with a sears catalog.
So this was going on.
The corsets were terrible.
Women hated them.
And by the mid 19th century, like you said,
they said, you got these strong shoulders.
Why don't we use those?
Looking out.
That's right.
And the first modern bra pattern was filed in 1863
by a guy named Lumen Chapman.
And he was from, or he was living at least
in Camden, New Jersey.
And he had this very first over the shoulder design.
And it was tightened in the back like a corset,
but it was softer.
It was made of stretchy fabric and it had these cups.
They were called breast puffs in the patent
for the extra support and comfort, I think.
That is radically better than breast bags.
You said it again.
So Lumen Chapman, strangely enough,
his design did not take off,
although he does have the first patent.
But a woman named Hermione Cadol, great name.
She created something that was basically like a corset,
but it was a corset cut in two.
And the top half very strongly resembled a modern bra.
And she called it the lebionetra or wellbeing.
And her stuff still didn't quite take off.
I think because she was married to the corset still,
or the general corset design,
which made sense because at the time,
up until the early 20th century,
if you didn't wear a corset,
you were basically advertising that you had loose morals.
So the corset was just that,
whether you hated corsets with all of your might,
and a lot of women did,
you still had to wear them just to be socially acceptable.
So it would take, as far as legend goes,
a very free spirited, very wealthy socialite
named Mary Phelps Jacobs,
to basically say nuts to that.
I'm tired of these corsets.
They're those whale bone stays
are protruding through this kind of sheer dress
that I want to wear to this dance.
Let me try something else.
And she apparently instructed one of her mates,
because again, she was a wealthy socialite,
to make what we would consider the first modern bra
out of some silk handkerchiefs and ribbon.
Yeah, she was only 19.
We should point out,
that she moved to Paris later on and changed her name to,
is it Caressa Crosby?
I think so.
Or Caress, I'm not sure if you pronounce that last E.
I'm not sure either.
But that was her final name.
So Crosby had this idea when she was 19,
and it was before an event
that she was going to a debutante ball.
And she called it the backless brazier.
And people at the party loved it.
I imagine women especially loved it.
And she got a patent for this thing in 1914,
and very unwisely sold the idea for a mere 1500 bucks
to Warner Brothers Corset Company.
Yeah, who turned around and in the next 30 years
made 10,000 times that amount from that patent.
Oh yeah.
So it's about 38 grand that she was paid today
for the patent, and they made about $225 million
in today's money off of it.
But she was rich anyway, right?
In bet, yeah, she was rich anyway.
She was a super interesting person from what I saw.
She, basically any famous author today
that was writing in the 20s,
she was like real good friends with.
And she herself wrote too,
I think she had a publishing house called Black Sun.
But she wrote for a while pornography on commission
from an Oklahoma oil man
who couldn't get enough of her stuff.
Like that was just one of the-
Rami another sexist story.
That was one of the many things that she did in her life.
She wrote pornography.
Amazing.
So World War I turns out to be a good thing
if you're a woman because steel is in short supply.
The US joins the war and says, you know what?
We gotta have all the steel in this country
go toward war munitions and battleships and stuff.
And American women said, oh great,
cause you know what has steel, my corset,
let's get rid of it and ditch these things for good.
And elastic fabric started coming into the market.
Latex came into the market.
And so all of a sudden American women
could finally get rid of the corset
in favor of this new invention called the Brazier.
And of course we don't want you to be too comfortable ladies.
You might want to at least put a girdle on
just to keep everything nice and cinched in.
Which is basically like Hermony Caddell's
two piece corset, but whatever.
Patriotism freed them from that social expectation
of having to wear a corset, which was pretty great.
But I saw that the steel that the corsets freed up
equaled 28,000 tons
enough to make two battleships in World War I.
That's awesome.
That's a lot of corsets steel.
Yeah.
So this led to like a complete revolution
in undergarments for women, right?
So in the 20s, one of the first bras was basically
there was a company called Boyish Form,
which held the breasts down and back into the left.
Wait, what was it called?
Boyish Form, B-O-Y-S-H Form.
And from what I can tell,
they were basically saying Boyish Form.
Okay, that's what I was about to say.
But they shortened it by removing the eye
and changed it to Boyish Form.
They're like, they'll never know.
Right, no one will ever get this trickery.
But it was because of that flapper style
was very much slight and boyish.
But then along came a company in the late 20s
called Maiden Form.
And they named themselves Maiden Form
to kind of contradict Boyish Form
because one of their big things was,
hey man, let's not be ashamed of these boobs
and try to hide them.
Let's accentuate these things and boy did they ever.
Yeah, I mean, in the World War II
and the age of the big Buxom Hollywood bombshell era,
people like Jane Russell,
then in the 50s with Marilyn Monroe.
And it's all this sort of male ideal at the time
is what we're getting at,
is the bras sort of followed suit.
But when these women came on the scene,
that's when if you look at TV shows from back then
or advertisements, you see these bras
that were very pointy.
And I think they even called them bullet bras
or torpedo bras.
And that was sort of all the rage
just because the sort of,
I mean, Hollywood's always sort of driving fashion
in that way and it certainly did back then
because Twiggy coming along in the 60s
with their very sort of slim androgynous look,
all of a sudden in the 60s,
bras were being thrown in the trashcan.
They're like, we don't need bras at all.
Yeah, and then there was a guy, a designer
who is an avant-garde designer named Rudy Gernreich.
And he came up with the no bra in 1964,
which is basically like what you would consider a bra today.
It's meant to just kind of be there and be supportive,
but also kind of fade into the background,
which is the antithesis, huh?
Like a quiet friend.
Exactly.
But that's like the antithesis of the torpedo
or bullet bra, which would take your eye,
clean out if you got too close to it.
But this is, you can kind of see,
like we've gone from 20s where boy form was,
or boyish form was all the rage
and to the exact opposite, to back to the 20s.
And then it kind of swung back toward,
you know, large busty poppin' out kind of thing,
even more than before,
whereas, because now it's not covered by a sweater,
where torpedoes, it was all about accentuating the boobs
upward and to the left.
And then the wonder bra kind of really helped move that along.
And what was really interesting is,
I remember when the wonder bra came out in America,
it was in the 90s, but it turns out
that in the far off land of Canada,
it had been invented 30 years before.
It just took 30 years to get down to America
and become popular.
That's pretty funny.
Isn't that weird?
Yeah, that is totally weird.
Yeah.
Canadians are too nice to insist.
Like, by the way, we have a better bra up here.
Right.
And then now things have swung back again
to where they're like, do you even need a bra?
And a lot of people are like, I don't think you do.
It's kind of a personal preference.
Yeah.
It certainly can be,
but also I think there's still very much a stigma.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, it's true.
There's just no arguing that right now.
No, I mean, if you're a woman
and you go waltzing into a conference meeting
at your business and you're not wearing a bra,
then someone's gonna say something, I guarantee you.
Exactly, yes.
But I think also, even if somebody didn't say something
or it was okay with everybody else,
from what I can tell, there's a certain psychological
security blanket aspect to wearing a bra.
If that's what you've been raised to do to wear a bra.
Oh, for sure.
And to not do that would take a real psychological shift
in how you feel and how secure you feel without it.
And I was reading about training bras
because I didn't feel like I was enough of a creep as it is.
You're like, oh boy.
But from what I was reading about training bras,
even if the girl doesn't need a bra yet for any real purpose,
it provides like some kind of psychological thing
that they're like, okay, I'm keeping up with my peers
who actually do need a bra or I'm going to like
the eighth grade dancers, say sixth grade dance or something.
And I wanna wear this dress, but it's gonna look weird
if I'm not wearing a bra.
So I need a bra.
So, and I think that kind of psychology continues on
well into adulthood too, so that it would be weird
or feel weird to not wear a bra
if that's what you've done your whole life.
Yeah, and I think it also has to do with your comfort level
with your breast size, not to get too personal,
but like if I had a dime for every time,
Emily was like, you gotta go get the delivery food
at the door, cause I'm not wearing a bra.
And you know, Emily has bigger boobs.
So there, I said it.
She might be more comfortable if she had smaller breasts,
but I don't know, I'm gonna go home and ask her though.
Okay, I feel like we should sit in silence for five minutes.
So you mentioned Maidenform, we'll get to this later,
but they were founded in 1929 by William and Ida Rosenthal
who invented or introduced at least
the letter based cup sizing system.
But we'll get to that weird bit of voodoo in a minute
cause I still have no idea what's going on there.
But in, actually it wasn't in a year,
from 1949 to 1963, they had a very, very successful
print ad campaign called I Dream,
which you can go look up online.
And these ads, which were very racy at the time of course,
were women doing things topless with just their bra on.
They would have on like a regular skirt
that you would wear in that era, but no top,
no blouse, and they were dreaming.
One lady was dreaming of being a firefighter
and she was fighting a fire with no shirt on.
Or I dreamed I went back to school in my Maidenform bra
and it's a woman in her bra at a grammar school desk.
Or I dreamed I won the election in my Maidenform bra.
Man, that's a face palm.
She's taking the stage on election night.
And beyond these being, and old advertisements
are all funny and awful in every way.
But beyond this being funny and awful,
it truly is kind of gross that what they're showing
are things that are dreams for these women,
like having a regular job,
and things that they may not have been allowed
to do at the time.
Yeah, so, but in, at the time, like yes,
they were trying to sell their bras,
and yes, there was like a certain amount of sex appeal
to the whole campaign, but in their defense,
like this was a very like progressive,
liberating ad campaign.
It was conceived by three women on one hand.
And also it's not like they were like,
ha ha, you couldn't possibly hold public office
because you're a woman.
It was like, it was showing that women dream
of this kind of stuff, that they want to do
this kind of thing, and that at least in their dreams,
they're capable of doing this,
rather than we can't even talk about that.
It's so preposterous.
We couldn't even possibly create an ad campaign.
So it was kind of like progressive in that sense.
It's in retrospect that it's really cringy,
but really what you're cringing is not like maiden form
was making fun of women for not being able to do these things.
It's more an indictment of society
for them being restricted from these things at the time.
Yeah, that's, this is one of these definitely
where you could come at it from a lot of angles.
Sure.
And have opinions about it, but we should read,
they had a contest in 1955 with the public
about new dream ideas, and the winner from 1957,
and Dave, God bless you for finding this,
was, I dreamed I danced the horn pipe
with Sinbad the sailor.
Don't even know what that means.
That's another thing you can approach
from a bunch of different angles.
I think we should approach a message break,
and then we'll talk about the wacky world
of bra sizing right after this.
What matters?
Not everything.
What matters?
What matters?
What matters?
Just stay on the surface.
Seriously.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
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Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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blowing on it, and popping it back in,
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app,
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
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Well now, when you're on the road, driving in your truck,
why not learn a thing or two from Josh and Chuck.
It's stuff you should know.
Stuff you should know.
All right.
All right, Chuck.
So one thing that I've read is that American bras don't fit.
And that there's a reason for that.
Something like there's a statistic
that 80% of women, American women at least,
are wearing bras that don't fit.
And supposedly, that's kind of made up and based
on anecdotal evidence.
But it's been bandied about for so long
that people take it as gospel.
But regardless of whatever the statistic may or may not be,
American bras are known for not fitting.
And it's because American bra manufacturers have basically
said, we've created this standard measuring scale.
And it just is economically efficient for us
to mass produce this size to this size.
And if you happen to fall outside of that size, you're SOL.
And it's your fault.
There's something wrong with your body
for not adhering to the standard norm, body size norm.
This is largely becoming a relic of the past.
But it's still, from what I can tell,
very much present when you go bra shopping.
Yeah.
And I've heard this complaint from Emily over the years
and a lot of women that, yeah, it's
tough to find a bra that really fits well and feels good
and does everything it's supposed to do.
And that's why when you find one, you order six of them.
But there are, these days, before we get into the sizing,
that is changing some now with these more bespoke companies
that have a more custom-made, tailored to your size
kind of things.
And I wonder why it took that long for someone
to think outside the box and challenge big brazier
and say, hey, you're doing it wrong.
I bet there's a lot of money to be made from bespoke braziers.
Yeah, from what I understand, there is.
And although it's just now happening in the US,
apparently it happened, I believe, back in the 90s
in the UK with a movement called bra fitting, one word,
where it's basically like, look, two measurements is not
enough to create a perfect bra.
You need a bunch of different measurements
under different conditions.
You need to take your shirt and bra all the way off.
We need to get in there.
But when we're done, you're going to have a well-fitting bra.
And it's just now catching on in the United States.
And what's surprising is that it's just now catching on.
But this technique and the sizing standard
that we use here in the United States
goes back to, I think, the 20s, if not the 30s.
Yeah, 1929 is when they found a maiden form
and introduced this cup sizing.
And I'm not going to pretend to fully understand this.
But I can read.
Oh, you got it?
Yeah, yeah.
You go ahead, though.
I want to hear your attempt.
No, no, no.
Because when what will happen is I'll read,
and then you'll do it again in your own words.
And then this episode is 15 minutes longer than it should be.
All right.
You got my number.
My number happens to be 34C.
So the cup system is what it's called.
It consists of two measurements and the difference between them.
So the first measurement is the overbust,
which is the circumference of your chest all the way
around your body across the nipples.
That's your overbust measurement, right?
OK.
Now, if you'll also measure right below the breasts
all the way around your body, that's your underbust.
And if you subtract those two, you're
going to come up with a difference in inches or centimeters
depending on where you are in the world.
And you can use that as part of a handy table to say, oh,
there's a three-inch difference.
That means that I'm a C cup, right?
Right, that's where the lettering comes from.
Right, the difference between your underbust and your overbust
generates some knowledge about the volume that your breasts are
going to take up, which is your cup size.
Got it?
Generates knowledge?
Yeah, exactly.
So that underbust measurement is also used,
and that's the number that comes before it.
So if you're a 34C, that means your chest
is 34 inches around at the ribcage under your breasts.
And then if you're a C, that means
that there's a three-inch difference.
That means that you are 37 inches around your chest
at the nipples.
And so you'd be a 34C.
And that those two measurements are supposedly
like all you need to come up with a fitting bra.
But apparently, that's just not true.
Yeah, I mean, that all makes sense.
I think the thing that confused me is the sister sizing.
I understand that, too.
Thing.
So if you have a 36C and a 34C brazier,
that's not the same cup size,
because a 34C is the only true C.
So if you wanna go up a band size, but not the cup size,
you buy a 36B or a 38A.
So the volume of the cup size is relative
to the circumference of the band.
Yeah, I mean, it's as simple as that.
I think the problem, the breakdown,
is that this sister sizing thing
has not been widely publicized to women.
And so that they think like,
well, if the band is a little tight
and I'm a 36C, then I need to go up to a 38C.
And that's just not the case.
Yeah, in music, you want a tight band.
In braziers, you don't.
Well, supposedly part of that bra fitting trend
that started in the UK is that suggests
that a tight band is the key to a good fitting bra,
that that's where most of your support comes,
and that most women opt for a band size
that's a little too loose.
But the point is, is your cup volume does not go up
when you go up a band size, it doesn't have to.
So that means that a 34C, if you go down in band size,
you would go up in cup size,
and your cup size would stay the same.
So a 34C is the same as a 32D.
And then the other way, a 34C is the same as a 36B.
And once you understand the sister sizing thing,
then you can actually use this two measurement standard
to find a bra that actually fits better.
That's right.
And if you're wondering how this all works,
it works with bra fitting models.
There are women that get paid money to go in
and get fit for thousands and thousands of bras
and to give feedback.
And this all didn't completely start there,
but in the 1970s, there was a singer named Dorothy Galligan
from New York, answered an ad for a bra fitting model,
and they said, you know what?
I know this sounds sexist,
and we probably, even though it's the 70s,
shouldn't be saying this in an office,
but you have the perfect 34Bs,
and that's the standard size
which we're designing our bras on.
So for almost 20 years, Dorothy Galligan was the model
in New York in the lingerie district
that would work 10, 11, 12 hour days
trying on thousands and thousands of bras
and giving her feedback
so they could go back to the sewing machine and redo it.
Yeah, because that's the other part of the problem
with bras that don't necessarily fit.
In addition to not making larger sizes and cup volumes
and smaller sizes and cup volumes,
like they're based around one woman's pair of breasts
and her breasts became the standard
for the bra industry in the 20th century
so that if you could create a bra
that fit Dorothy Galligan correctly as a 34B,
you could use that to basically grow out from either way.
That's right.
So that's a real problem
for women who have different shapes and sizes,
and it's really sad to me to think
that they were told for decades that,
if your bra doesn't fit,
something's wrong with your body.
Not that...
You must've quit.
Exactly.
Well, here's the thing too.
It's not just breast size.
It's how big your back is
and how the bra, it holds the breasts, the cups do,
but it has to do with your shoulders
and your back and your armpits and everything else.
There's so many nuances to everybody's body,
men and women that...
I mean, I think until recently
they were trying to do the best they could,
but it was pretty narrow the options that women had.
Yeah, I get the impression
that they were not trying to do the best that they could,
that they basically said,
when we release a new bra, it comes in these sizes.
Well, doing the best they could for a huge industry
that had to satisfy tens of millions
of different kinds of bodies.
They were kind of hand-strung.
You can't have 450 bra sizes in manufacture on that scale.
Yeah, you can't mass manufacture,
but I think that's what's being proven
like you're saying by this new bespoke revolution and that.
You just, you can't get that big.
Although now you can get that big because it's bespoke
and because you can say,
hey, download our app and take these measurements
using your phone and upload it
and then we'll just custom make some bras for you.
And I also read that Poland makes
really, really good-fitting bras as well.
I read a, I think it was a New York Times article about.
Interesting.
And the author traveled to Poland
to verify this herself.
And she said she didn't find the perfect bra,
but she came away with like four or five bras
that were awfully close,
way closer than she'd ever had before.
It's funny, after all these years,
I still remember to not put a bra in a dryer
because of the movie, Head Vig and the Angry Inch.
I don't remember that part.
No, I never saw it.
That's why I don't remember that part.
Oh man, it's great.
John Cameron Mitchell, who also a friend of Movie Crush,
he's a friend of Knowles.
He played Head Vig and created the character
and directed the film.
But there's a scene where he's screaming,
do not put a bra in a dryer, it warps.
And I guess that's true because ever since then,
I've been like, oh, I don't know if I'm doing laundry.
I should not put a bra on a dryer.
It does do some weird things to it,
although you can also put it in a laundry bag.
And I think that keeps it from like wrapping around stuff,
which makes it a lot last longer.
You can put it in a dryer.
Oh, right.
Yeah, like when a bra like collects everything else
in its wake.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So I don't think we can not talk about Victoria's Secret.
Man, if I had a dime for every time you said that to me,
or as many dumb, dumb guys call it, Victoria's Secrets.
Yeah, dummies.
So Victoria's Secret actually started out,
a husband and wife founded it in the 70s
in the San Francisco area,
because the husband had gone to like the department store
to buy laundry for his wife
and was treated like a scale for it, right?
Even in San Francisco in the 70s?
I guess so.
All right.
Department stores have always been a certain way,
no matter where you are, I think.
So he said, well, we need to create like a lingerie store
that's made for men to go buy for women.
And that's what they created was Victoria's Secret.
And it was semi successful.
And then they sold to a guy named Leslie Wexman,
I believe it was Wexman, who had founded The Limited.
And he took it, I think he bought it for a million dollars.
And within two decades, it was worth $2 billion.
And the guy who founded it with his wife,
they ended up getting divorced and he died broke
and jumped from the Golden Gate Bridge sadly enough.
Oh, wow.
But Victoria's Secret dominated the bra industry
in the United States for many, many decades
until very recently when it was overthrown by women
who said, enough.
Yeah.
Well, it's funny, you know, Roy Raymond said,
you know what we need is a store where men can go in
and buy sexy lingerie for their wives.
And what he failed to hear was the sound of tens of millions
of women across the country saying, no, you don't.
Right.
Well, that's what Leslie, I think it's Wexman.
That's what he figured out was that this thing was
a good idea, but they had missed the mark
in that they were marketing toward men
and they were completely isolating women.
Cause he said, like these Victoria's Secret stores
were lit with like, you know, weird kind of reddish lighting
and there were velvet couches and Oriental rugs.
And he said, it wasn't.
Well, I've walked by them in the mall very slowly.
This was like in the early 70s
or late 70s and early 80s.
Yeah, that's what I'm talking.
Okay, all right.
So he said, man, I would have loved to have seen this.
He said they were, they were Victorian,
not like a Victorian foyer.
They were like a Victorian brothel basically.
And it was like just chasing women away, attracting men,
but women buy, you know, underwear for themselves
way more than their husbands do.
And so he kind of revamped it a little bit
and turned it into something that women felt comfortable
and actually wanted to go into.
Yeah, it's interesting.
According to that book, Uplift that we mentioned earlier,
despite Victoria's secret and its history,
women have really been key to the development of bras
in the United States.
I think over 1200 US patents have been awarded for bras
between 1863 and 1969,
and half of those have been held by women.
And in the industry,
they have always held pretty important positions
and been well regarded designers and managers,
specialists, merchandising,
promotional product managers.
It is one industry where it seems that has not been,
here's a product for women run entirely by men.
Right.
And rightfully so, I would say.
Yeah, absolutely.
So there is also a very famous legend as far as bras go,
which is the burning of bras at a 1968 demonstration.
Yeah, not true currently.
No, it's a myth.
There was, in fact, a demonstration outside
of Miss America pageant in Atlantic City in 1968.
It was the brainchild of Carol Hannish,
who helped basically at this moment give birth
to the second wave feminism.
And they actually had a trash can
that said freedom trash can,
and women threw stuff into it
that they considered like shackles of the patriarchy,
like false eyelashes, bras, lingerie, that kind of stuff.
But there was no burning.
That came from a reporter who suggested that they burn it
as a nod to the burning of draft cards,
but no one actually burned this stuff,
but it became kind of set in stone as true,
even though it really wasn't.
That's right, big, fat lie.
And then lastly, Chuck, I've got one extra thing.
You ready?
Ready.
Do you have anything else?
I don't.
Do you need to wear a bra?
It's a long standing question.
And apparently the answer is no,
at least as far as a study in France,
a 15 year study of 300 women,
I think they were aged 18 to 35.
And this study found that women who did not wear bras
develop more muscle tissue in their breasts,
ostensibly to provide support
that the bra wasn't there to provide.
And that by proxy, if you did wear a bra,
the muscles in your breasts were less prone to develop,
and thus you would have more likely to have breasts
that sag or a pendular breasts than you would have
if you didn't wear a bra.
Kind of like you're making your breasts sink or swim
by not wearing a bra.
So it's just one study,
but it is pretty surprising that they found
basically the opposite of conventional wisdom,
because most people say,
if you don't wear a bra, your breasts will get saggy,
and that's apparently not true.
Interesting.
And I also ran across a weird question on Google.
You know, it has like suggested searches.
What happens if we squeeze breast?
Uh, I don't know.
I didn't even bother to look.
Just the question itself was good enough.
Oh man.
You got anything else?
I got nothing else.
What about the bro or the man's ear?
Oh yeah, can't forget the bro.
Well, since we said bro,
it's time for listener mail, everybody.
I'm gonna call this more on bidets.
Hey guys, love the show.
Thanks for all you do.
It's especially meaningful in these crazy times.
I'm currently hanging out in Northern Japan
on a trip that changed from a between jobs
snowboarding sabbatical in December to,
well, I guess I live here for now.
So you're buying this, not a bad place to be,
I would imagine.
So good for you, Adam.
I'm sure you guys got a ton of similar emails to this,
but in the bidets episode,
you had mentioned the type of toilet
with a sink sprayer attachment nearby.
In my experience, this is a super common thing
in households and many lower budget hotel accommodations
in the Philippines and other Southeast Asian countries.
It is awesome and commonly referred to as the bum gun
by foreign travelers and expats.
I don't know the etymology of bum gun,
so I'm not sure if that term has been adopted domestically
in various bum gun enthusiast countries,
but like one ring or Spidey's abilities,
it has great power and must be wielded carefully.
So bum gun wisely, my friends.
That is from Adam.
Thanks a lot, Adam.
And best of luck to you and your new home.
Hang tight, buddy.
Things will pass eventually.
If you want to get in touch with us like Adam did
and talk about bum guns or bras or what have you,
you can email, send us an email to stuffpodcast
at HowStuffWorks.com.
Stuff you should know is a production
of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
visit the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen
to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, hey dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars
of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast
with Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice
would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.