Stuff You Should Know - How Spiritualism Works
Episode Date: May 19, 2020Something spooky was born on the American frontier in the mid-19th century: the idea that people’s personalities survive death and that some gifted individuals can communicate with them. It develope...d into a religion that some still practice today. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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
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 iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryan over there,
somewhere in the heart of darkness.
I'm in the office, dude.
Where, I hear your voice, Chuck, but I can't see you.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know why people
need to know the behind the scenes things,
but home recording provides some challenges
and I was getting pretty frustrated.
So I was like, you know what?
I'm gonna go to the studio.
Yeah.
Because I know it'll sound great in here.
Yeah, it does.
And I know there won't be dogs and children.
And everyone should feel good about it
because I have not seen another human being.
Yeah. In the building.
Didn't a security guard try to run you off the road
when you were parking?
He didn't try, he stopped me literally in the parking lot.
I was like, what are you doing here?
I was like, I'm going to my job.
And he said, okay.
He said, stay home, save lives.
But before we left, I mean, apparently since I left,
they have these, there's a bottle of microphone sanitizer.
Whoa.
There are headphone sanitized, or not sanitized,
but just disposable headphone covers.
Sweet.
And I feel more safe here than I do at my house.
What, a microphone sanitizer?
That sounds really made up.
Yeah, it's, I'll go ahead and buzz market.
No, I won't because it smells bad.
And I didn't want to buzz market
and then say it smells bad.
It's apple flavor.
Whoa.
Which would make Emily just like turn over in her bed.
It's a good Jolly Rancher flavor.
Not the best scent though.
I hate it when they add scent to stuff that doesn't need scent.
Yeah, I agree.
Try finding an unscented garbage bag these days.
Is it tough too?
Yeah, man, every single one of them.
I even got some that said unscented
and it still smells like something.
You've missed that in parentheses underneath it says mostly.
Yeah, 99% unscented.
We can't help ourselves.
1% rosemary.
Well, I don't have my over the ear headphones right now.
I just have ear buds.
So I'm wearing one of Yumi's long scarves
wrapped around my head twice to keep from your audio
bleeding onto the track through my microphone.
You either look like Lawrence of Arabia
or like you just wandered in with a head injury.
Yeah, I had to, it kept slipping off
with the Lawrence of Arabia look.
So I had to do it the other way around.
So now it looks like I have a 19th century toothache.
Okay.
Oh man, give me another picture.
It's not, it's not very comfortable.
My Adam's apple is being pressed
toward the back of my throat right now.
Yeah, what was the deal with that whole toothache thing?
Like, was there ice in there or something?
Or was it just like, I just tie their chin shut
and it'll help.
Knowing that era, there were probably some sort of
like razor blade and a heroin concoction
that would just scrape the area where the tooth was
and inject you with dope to keep you from complaining.
Dr. Payne's new chin wrap now with more leeches.
Right, from the makers of microphone sanitizer.
All right, let's get into this.
We've already been goofing around for too long.
Let's just finish.
Fine, let's get this over with.
Let's get serious and talk about spiritualism, shall we?
This is a great, great job by Grabster.
Great idea by you.
Yeah. And it'll be a great episode.
Yeah, Grabster, we asked him to help us out with this.
So he put together a world-class article for us.
And when we asked him, we said,
hey, how about spiritualism?
He goes, my brother wrote his dissertation on that.
Should be simple.
And I mean. Right, so he just forwarded us that.
Right, he didn't even like erase his brother's first name.
He just did a strike through and wrote ed after it.
Easy money.
So it is like a really, really interesting phenomena
and something I think we kind of take for granted
because it pops up everywhere in our world, in pop culture.
I mean, it's just a part of everything
from crystal balls to seances to Ouija boards to tarot cards.
All of this stuff, movies, yeah.
As a matter of fact, I ran across,
so you know, Dan Aykroyd's huge into UFOs, right?
I did know that actually.
He's also enormous into spirits and ghosts.
It's actually one of the impetuses, yeah, I think so,
of him writing Ghostbusters.
He's actually a fourth generation spiritualist
with a capital S, like the church spiritualism.
He was raised that way.
His father, grandfather and great-grandfather were all
spiritualists and that's how he was raised as well.
So it does just kind of, it's so permeated our culture.
It's weird to think of a time when it wasn't there,
but there actually was this period starting
and right about in the middle of the 19th century,
going well into the 20th century,
where there was a movement that basically said
the spirit world is there, it exists.
When you die, your personality survives
and some people actually have a talent for communicating
with the spirits and the spirit world
and we're going to start doing that.
And that was spiritualism, the spiritualist movement.
Yeah, and Ed pointed out, which we should as well,
that ghosts and things like that and ghost stories,
they had been around since people have been around.
Everyone since the dawn of humankind
has tried to figure out what happens after you die,
do people visit, do they take on other forms or whatever.
So that's different than what we're talking about.
What we're talking about is spiritualism
in that it became a big scam in way to get money
out of people who are in pain from a friend's
or loved one's death.
Sadly, yeah, yeah, for sure.
But there is like a thread through there
where this same era, this same period
and this belief in communicating with the spirits
and the idea that you could go to a seance
and talk to your dead loved one or whatever.
It produced this other group of people who said,
yes, there are tons of fraudsters and hucksters out there
who are taking advantage of this.
But there's also this real, the real version of it
actually does exist and we're gonna apply
this new fangled thing called science to investigate it.
And that produced that era of people like Charles Fort
or Harry Price who visited the Borley Rectory,
the most haunted place in England
or Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Like these guys, I know, I'm trying out a new version.
I like it.
These guys though, they believed in this stuff
and the possibility of it.
They also believed in the possibility
of applying science to it.
And even if science couldn't explain it,
it didn't mean that it didn't exist.
And then there was another group
who were what we would recognize today
is like pure skeptics, like the James Randys of the day
who all followed in the footsteps of Harry Houdini
as we'll see who kind of created this.
So you had Huxters, believers who were skeptical
and genuine pure skeptics who believed
none of it was correct.
Yeah, and what I mentioned before,
like all the previous attempts to do stuff like this
pre-mid 1800s and largely the Northeast United States,
it was more religious like prophets and shaman
and stuff like that.
Spiritualism was the birth of the Madame Cleo's of the world.
No, yeah. Ed refers to it as a democratization.
And that's one way to look at it,
but it was the idea that, hey, if you are chosen
and you are special, it's not like you have
to be some religious leader.
You can just be a regular person with the gift.
Exactly, yeah, which was a huge sea change.
And there are basically a few things
that kind of came together for this mentality,
this fertile kind of imagination of this pocket of America
and Western New York where all of this began
to kind of take shape.
And one of those things was the frontier,
this frontier mentality.
The historian, Frederick Jackson Turner
called it the significance of the frontier
in American history.
And he basically said, man, the people who are living out
there on the frontier, they're living on the edge
of civilization, the leading edge, right?
Right beyond that, what they're coming up against,
and this is highly debatable
because part of what they were coming up against
was Native America.
It just wasn't a civilization in the form
that any European had ever encountered before.
But the idea was that the people who are living
on the frontier and expanding westward
were basically being forced just by virtue
of having to survive under these weird conditions
outside of culture and civilization in the European sense,
that they were having to abandon that culture
and basically make it up as they went along
and recreate a new culture from the frontier
and that that just kind of threw the rules out the window.
Yeah, this is one of my favorite things
when we do topics that, when you can look back
at a movement and point to factors that
at any other time in history,
if just one of these might not have taken,
might not have influenced it,
then it might not have happened at all.
There's something about that that I've always really loved
and this is a perfect example.
The frontier life is one, religious fervor is another,
and specifically in New York in the 1800s,
people were really caught up on this religious fervor
and it kind of went from town to town
and there was no big religious authorities in the area.
They were out on the frontier.
They had no structured hierarchy of religion.
And so again, they could just make up stuff.
And I'm not saying that's not tied to this next sentence
because I don't want to turn anyone off,
but a lot of religions sprang out from this region
during that time like Millerism and Mormonism
and Quakers and Shakers kind of had a resurgence basically
a shot in the arm,
just because of this fervor going on at the time.
And I couldn't quite put where Millerism,
why it seems so familiar.
And then I remember that that was the woman
who gave birth eventually to the Seventh Day Adventists
and that popped up in the Kellogg episode, remember?
Yeah, yeah.
Millerism was where it all started,
but that was, and that really kind of indicates,
and I love it when things we've talked about before,
like have even more context from something else,
but that just kind of goes to show you like,
this is the kind of place where somebody could be like,
I'm in contact with the spirits
or Jesus came and hung out with me or whatever.
And this is what I know and what I've been told.
So let's start a religion based on it.
And not even necessarily just religions too,
but also like social movements, like utopian societies where-
And chew your food 20 times, so you'll poopies here.
Exactly.
Or women have equal rights as men,
which is just completely radical.
Or how about 50 of us live together?
And just by the fact that we all live together,
we're married according to this utopian society.
Just whatever you wanted to do,
you kind of could because the frontier
threw the rules out the window,
or at the very least cultural traditions
that most people are raised into.
When that's not there, people make up their own.
Yeah, for sure.
And the third big factor that you mentioned was,
or we haven't talked about yet, was science.
And you talked a little bit about science at the beginning,
but the idea that in the middle of the industrial revolution,
when we're really learning a lot more
than we ever have about science
and things like electromagnetism
and things that you can't see,
but science is saying, oh, it's there.
This kind of fed the spiritualist movement
because that's something else that you can't see
that other people are saying is there.
So they're like, well, hey, if science is saying,
there are things out there we can't quite explain,
but trust me, it's real,
then why shouldn't I believe this stuff too?
Yeah, or, well, like electromagnetism,
maybe that actually explains how spirits survive after death.
It was a really wide open time
as far as acceptance of possibilities,
rather than, no, science has said this is not possible,
or it can't explain this,
or you can't see it with your own eyes,
so it won't, it doesn't jive.
Like there was a lot more willingness
among people who were scientifically minded to say,
well, maybe this is a good explanation of that,
let's investigate.
Yeah, the birth of science and medicine
was a really crazy time.
It really was, it really was.
So should we take a break?
Yes, come on, man.
Yes.
I think your beard holster is on too tight.
It is, I haven't been able to feel my nose
for about 15 minutes.
All right, well, go rub your nose
and bring some feeling back,
and we'll talk about some of the spiritualists.
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
The Spiritualists
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 flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
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, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
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, okay, I see what you're doing.
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.
This, I promise you.
Oh God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS
because I'll be there for you.
Oh man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yeah, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy, teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, 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 iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Okay, I'm gonna say it, spiritualists.
Nice.
And there was actually, so there was a bunch of factors
that led to the beginning of all of this,
including there was one that,
that I also came across that we need to mention,
a guy named Andrew Jackson Davis,
who combined the ideas of the German hypnotist Franz Mesmer
with the Swedish philosopher of the soul,
Emmanuel Swedenborg.
They were both 18th century.
He kind of brought them together.
He was a bit of a nobody,
but he emerged very, very soon
after the Fox sisters became celebrities
as a founder of the spiritualist movement,
almost like he was doing it off in isolation
at the same time that all of this began.
Yeah, so the Fox sisters figure into this really,
quite largely, and you can even pinpoint a date
to what you might consider the birth
of the modern American spiritualist movement.
It is March 31, 1848 in Hidesville, New York,
near Rochester, at a farm, this Fox family live there.
Real people, not a family of cute little red fuzzy creatures.
Voice by George Clooney.
Yeah, exactly.
Mr. and Mrs. Fox had three daughters, actually.
One was much older, her name was Leia.
She was 19 and 23 years older.
Why was that funny?
Because I saw a picture of her
and she's like the spitting image of Jeffrey Ross.
You gotta look her up.
Jeffrey Ross wearing a bonnet,
that's what Leia Fox looked like.
I didn't see, I saw the picture of the three of them
and I didn't get a good close-up.
That's an unfortunate look for him and her.
Yeah, anybody really.
And I think he would admit that too.
Oh yeah.
He's doing all right though.
What if he had really thin skin, the roast master?
He couldn't take a joke against himself.
Have you seen that bump in Mike show?
It's pretty good.
No, is that the roast competition thing?
Yeah, he and David tell just sit there and roast people.
It's really good.
Man, I used to love David tell back in the day.
He has just turned into like the weird
like comedy genius friend that Jeffrey Ross has
and it shines through in this.
Awesome, I'll check it out.
So the Fox family, older daughter Leia was 19
and 23 years older than younger Kate and Maggie,
or I guess Maggie and Kate if you're going in that order.
And on that night on March 31st, 1848,
they heard these rapping knocking sounds
and they didn't know where it was coming from.
And that kind of kickstarted this whole thing
in a weird way.
This led and we'll talk about the more specifics,
but in a weird way, this led to them eventually saying,
wait a minute, we can make some money
if we convince people that young Kate and Maggie
are a conduit to the other side.
Yeah, the thing is, is like when it went from, you know,
like, oh, there's a ghost rapping or knocking
like a poltergeist kind of thing too.
This ghost will respond to questions from the sisters
through rapping and knocking, like how old is Maggie?
And it would rap like 15 times or something like that.
And that really caught a lot of people's attention.
And Maggie and Kate moved in with Leia.
And apparently from what I read, it was Leia
whose idea was to take the show on the road,
try to scam people out of money.
It was not a super great person from what I read.
Yeah, I just, sorry.
I was thinking of a rapping ghost and got sidetracked
on my brain.
I'm the ghost of George Washington and I'm here to say,
I love fruity pebbles in a major way.
You know, as funny as I was gonna do that exact
same thing, but for the Fox family,
that's like the go-to rapper guys like us.
Oh, it totally is, guys who can't rap.
Yeah, I'm here to say something, something, something
in a something way.
The Zach Morris method, I think is what that is.
I wonder if that's based on an actual rap.
I guess there was one at some point
that really did that, right?
Yeah, I think Blondie was the one popular, I said.
My name is Blondie.
I'm here to say I'm gonna try rap
because it's popular today.
Exactly.
So what were you saying?
I was laughing, I didn't even notice, I'm sorry.
Oh, oh, just that, it was basically,
I was laying at Leah's feet for corrupting
the younger sisters.
Yeah, she ended up managing them as a unit,
I think later on, if I'm not mistaken,
but there aren't great records
of everything going on at the time.
But the idea was that Kate and Maggie were the ones,
it wasn't really her parents, but they're the ones
who could actually communicate with this barn spirit.
And so they said, you know what?
They not only can talk to this spirit,
media starts getting ahold of these stories.
And obviously back then it was a very big deal
with something like this coming out in the media
with not a lot else going on.
But they moved and would go away to other places
and said wherever they go, ghosts are talking to them.
So you guys, my daughters are talented and gifted.
They're not just talking to the,
what we think is a murder victim from our previous house.
Right, which just changed everything.
And also rather suspiciously,
Leah suddenly realized that she was able
to communicate with spirits too.
So all three of the sisters were able to.
But yeah, not just that one murder victim in their house
that had been the original ghost,
but just about any ghost.
And this was the beginning of the spiritualist movement.
Basically a prank by a couple of teenage girls
that got way out of hand really fast.
Yeah, and so what do they do?
They start having these private sessions
where people would pay money
and they would wear these big long dresses
that were in fashion at the time.
And no one's exactly sure of the exact mechanism,
but they would do some sort of toe knocking
or something where they couldn't be seen.
And that was the Morse code that they said
was the ghost speaking to them.
So it's really, they had like a little wooden stool
under the table with them
and they would take off their shoes surreptitiously.
And from what I can gather,
they could pop their knuckle of their toe
up and down with enough force
that it would make a thud on that wooden stool.
That's creepy in and of itself.
It was, yeah, they should have just been like,
forget all this spirit stuff, watch this weird thing.
But that was the phantom knocking.
And we know that because Maggie later on confessed
to the New York Tribune maybe or the post one of them
and said like, this is how we did it.
Actually in an effort to take her sister Leah down,
but it ended up taking the spiritualist movement down
and in large part.
But that was it, like thumping your knuckle
on a wooden stool.
They did this for 40 years.
They made a living around the world doing that
and created a new religion from it.
Yeah, and by the time the spiritualism fad
sort of died away, the two younger sisters were,
and she recanted that confession by the way,
but everyone's like, yeah, you already said it, you try.
But the two younger sisters and Maggie especially were
in pretty bad shape with alcoholism.
And they died sort of in a Call Your Brothers Eskway,
very quietly and fairly destitute in New York City
in the 1890s.
Trapped under newspapers.
Maybe.
But no, they had very interesting,
but also very sad lives.
Like I think Maggie married a skeptic and he died.
Not a good move.
Right, he died, he talked her out of doing spiritualism,
but she went back after he died.
Kate married another spiritualist
and she had a huge career touring the world
as a spiritualist, made a lot of money,
but apparently lost it all.
And Leah again was just kind of,
I guess a bit of a villain in this story.
Where's that movie, man?
I was wondering the exact same thing.
It's crazy, it hasn't been made 50 times already, you know?
Yeah, that would be pretty cool.
I couldn't even find a good documentary on it.
Oh yeah, yeah.
On them at least.
I'm sure there are plenty that they're featured in,
but give me those Fox sisters.
No matter how you look at it too,
whether you look at it from the aspect of a believer
who thinks like, this is where it all started,
these two sisters.
And there's plenty of reasons to believe
if you're a credulous person
or confiding as Mark Twain would put it,
that, you know, like the Andrew Jackson Davis guy
who kind of started this thing on his own,
supposedly wrote on March 31st, 1848,
that a spirit came to him and said, the work has begun.
We just started something over here.
And then later found out about the Fox sisters,
like there's all sorts of stuff you can believe.
And so it's interesting from that respect.
But also if you're just a pure dyed in the wool skeptic
who do not believe in any kind of afterlife
or soul or anything like that, it's equally interesting.
And in a totally different way that this whole,
like almost century long movement started from that,
you know?
Yeah, it's crazy.
I just love, I love this whole story.
So it's sweeping the nation at this point by the 1850s.
And we're gonna go over some of the different things
that they would do, some of the methods
that they would use to communicate with the other side,
to fake communicate with the other side.
The first one is channeling and these would be trance mediums.
So this is like when you've seen in a movie,
when someone is just talking like I am in my regular voice
and I'm entering the trance and I'm doing a lot of,
a lot of showy things to kind of get people,
you know, pretty pumped up.
I feel like they're spending their money well.
You're giving me pumped up, I'll tell you that.
And all of a sudden, you know, I go into this other voice
and I'm like a small child, maybe the parents lost a child
or I'm a woman or I'm...
Sammy Davis Jr.
Hey, Brad, I just came back to say
that don't worry about me.
This cat is doing just fine.
I came back to say I love fruity pebbles in a major way.
Invented rap.
That's right.
So if you were a good, talented medium
that meant that you were probably a pretty good actor,
you could probably do good voices.
Sometimes in the case of Cora Scott,
who I know we've talked about her before.
Her name sounds familiar,
but I have no recollection of talking about her.
Yeah, it sounds super familiar,
but she was one of the top mediums, trance mediums,
because she was this very sort of demure,
attractive young lady
and her whole demeanor was about that.
And then she was apparently a great actor
because she would go into this,
these big, heavy, gruff voices and the gulf
between who she was and who she was imitating
was so great that everyone was just like, fantastic.
Cora Scott, you're a genius.
Well, also, yeah.
She was like a little 12 year old girl when she started.
And supposedly she would take the stage
and confidently discuss like physics and philosophy
and all that stuff because there was some authoritative
spirit who had basically taken possession of her.
Yeah, and I looked up her picture
and Kate Winslet, I think, is from my casting couch
is who I would throw in that movie.
Okay, okay.
Not as the 12 year old, that would be weird
unless they do some sort of bad Irishman de-aging,
but she looked enough like her and she's a great actor.
So channeling is what you kind of think of
where somebody becomes possessed,
the medium becomes possessed, right?
Yeah.
There's also ones where like they're just saying like,
oh, I can hear what they're saying, but you can't
because they're speaking to me through telepathy.
Right.
Okay, that reminds me of John Edwards.
Remember him crossing over with John Edwards?
Yeah, I can't picture him.
I think if I saw a picture I would totally remember though.
You would, you would.
What a weird time the 90s were as far as stuff like that goes.
Although I think his show ran from 2000 to 2004.
Yeah, but that could sort of coincided
with the Reverend Bob Dobbs and the televangelism
and all that good stuff.
Yeah.
It was a crazy time.
So then there's automatic writing was another big one too.
And all of this should sound familiar.
Again, because the stuff just is so permeated
in the pop culture, it's crazy.
But automatic writing is instead of the medium's voice
being taken over, the medium being possessed
and speaking as the spirit,
the spirit took over their hand
and they would start writing.
And so in just the same way,
Cora Scott would have a completely different personality
or a different voice or different accent
or something like that.
This, like the handwriting or the word usage
or anything like that would be different
than the medium's normal handwriting.
This is automatic writing.
And there was-
Yeah, I'm trying to decide if I could do that.
Well, sometimes they would use their non-dominant hand.
So if you want to change your handwriting,
just do that to start.
Yeah, I can't, that's no way.
And then there was a woman named Pearl Curran
who wrote at least 5,000 poems, novels and plays
through automatic writing,
all channeling the spirit of a 17th century woman
from England named Patience Worth.
Nice.
That's prolific.
That's a lot of words.
And then what about direct voice?
Yeah, direct voice is when you are a medium,
you contact a spirit and the spirit is so powerful
that they just speak to you directly,
like the medium is just sitting there with their mouth closed.
And this happened usually in a dark room
where they would have a business partner
just behind the curtain, obviously, talking
or maybe they were just doing a bad ventriloquist kind
of deal where it's dark enough
where you can't really see their lips moving,
throwing their voice.
There was a woman named Leslie Flint.
That's a man.
There's a medium.
Oh, really?
He looked like the old man from up.
Oh, did it make you cry when you looked at him?
It did.
My daughter just watched that.
I was like, you've been through so much.
Here, have these balloons.
So yeah, Leslie, I actually love that name for a man.
So I don't know why I assumed,
but he would recreate famous people like Sammy Davis Jr.
but wasn't very good at it, apparently,
which is kind of funny.
That makes us all a little bit more ridiculous and fun.
Well, I was reading obituary about him
that was written by somebody who attended one of his,
or a couple, I think, of his seances.
And they said things like, you know,
a lot of times you could tell it
like what the trickery was or whatever,
but there were other times where he would like
be speaking over the voice, which is tough to do
with ventriloquism, or one time he was tested,
he was made to hold colored water in his mouth
while the spirit voice was speaking.
And you're like, wow, you know, that's pretty interesting.
And then you just think,
well, there's always an explanation for it.
And, you know, maybe there was another person
who was a confederate in the room, who knows.
But it just goes to show that even still, even today,
and this guy's obituary that was written in the 90s,
the 1990s, that they were like, yeah, you know,
he was largely considered a trickster or fraud,
but they'll still hedge and say, you know,
but there were a couple of things.
And at the very least, it's unexplained,
which is pretty interesting and neat,
but that doesn't necessarily mean that,
oh no, there really was a spirit
that was talking in the room thanks to him.
Amazing.
So we had table churning.
This isn't like a theatrical performance.
This is in a small room, everyone,
and this kind of think Ouija board with this,
it's the same sort of thing,
except the Ouija board would be the actual table
that you're sitting at.
You would, everyone would put their hands on the table
and then the table would move or tilt or something
when you're asking questions.
So it's inhabiting the furniture.
Of course, what's going on here is either like knee movements
or sometime they had these rings on the mediums finger
that were slotted and could move the table around
without anyone noticing.
Just another little parlor trick, basically.
Yeah, or the idea that you're moving the table yourself,
like a Ouija board, I can't remember what it's called,
but basically your body is moving
without your brain being aware of it.
And then there's also just the straight up power
of suggestion and this applies to table churning
and a lot of other stuff.
But if you're saying like, if you're the medium at a seance
and you said the table is rising, it's rising,
people who are willing to believe,
a lot of people who went to seance
as wanted to believe were already believed in this stuff.
Just the power of suggestion could be like,
oh, it is raising a little bit,
I can feel it, I can tell kind of thing.
Yeah, my favorite and I bet your favorite too
is ectoplasmic manifestations.
That's a good one.
Yeah, it's pretty good.
This is when you would actually,
as a spiritualist, produce something physical,
something would manifest itself an actual substance
and it was, they called it ectoplasm
and they could pull it from their body
and it was just basically something
that they would make beforehand out of whatever.
I mean, they would make it out of all kinds of things.
It was one story about someone who was actually gluing
cut out faces from a magazine onto dolls.
Yeah.
And those were ectoplasm spirits,
but they would hide these things sometimes
like up their butt or in their other body cavities
and they would pull these things out
and some of the pictures that you see online,
if you look up ectoplasm 1800's seance is just,
the pictures themselves are hysterical
and frightening all at the same time.
Yeah, especially now when you look back and see them,
you're like, how did anybody fall for that?
And it's really important to keep in mind,
one, they wanted to believe,
but two, these seances would be carried out
in dark rooms to where you couldn't see much at all.
You just suddenly see some luminous cloth or something
that you were led to believe was ectoplasm,
kind of what looked like floating
in the middle of the table or something like that.
It's stuff that's really easy to explain,
but in a darkened room that you've been sitting in
for three hours communicating with spirits,
you might be a lot more prone to buy into it
than under normal circumstances.
Yeah, for sure.
Maybe you're a little drunk.
Right, tipsy on Chinops.
Levitation was another big one, nice little party trick.
I actually could sort of do this for a little while,
the David Blaine method.
I don't know if you ever saw his
when he made himself levitate.
It's just kind of hopping up and down in air, right?
No, it's, you're thinking of trampolines.
Oh, that's not the same thing?
No, people can see those.
Oh, okay.
No, it's all about the angle with the David Blaine method
of getting them to see you from the right angle
to where what you're really doing is you're rising
your body up with just one,
like just your first three toes on your right foot.
Wow, that's impressive.
And you're hiding that with your other foot.
So it looks like you're just sort of
levitating a few inches off the ground
and then you act like you're unsteady
and then you land back down and go,
oh boy, that was a good one.
That was pretty powerful.
So wait a minute.
David Blaine can raise his entire body weight
with three toes.
Well, I mean, he's on his toes.
I just, I mean, I could do it at the time too.
This is in the 90s.
Man, that's impressive.
I don't think I've ever had the kind of
toe strength that is required to do that.
You can raise yourself up with one foot.
In a seated position?
No, no, no, you're standing.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, I got you.
Yeah, yeah, so what you're doing is you're standing there.
I got you.
And then you raise yourself off the ground
with just the toes on your right foot, let's say,
and you're keeping your left foot is shielding that
so you can't quite see it.
Yeah, no, I've got it.
I got it.
And it just creates, if you got someone at the right angle,
and I got pretty good at it,
my roommate, Justin, was like, you're getting better, mate.
Right, well, I'm getting drunker.
Well, both of those things are happening.
I thought you were talking about, like, you know,
like a fake ear or something like that,
where they're sitting cross-legged,
and they're meditating, I was like,
to do that with just three toes,
that in and of itself is pretty impressive,
but apparently no one does that.
All right, what are the other,
there's another couple of things they did too,
what are those?
Spear photography, pretty straightforward stuff where,
you know, this is the very beginnings of photography,
so people didn't understand double exposures,
unless you were a photographer.
But if you were, you could do all sorts of neat stuff,
like double expose something,
and put a ghostly face in the background
over someone's shoulder.
That's great.
I saw one, I saw a spirit photograph,
where it was a ghostly arm.
It also could have been a genie coming out of a bottle,
one of the two, it looked exactly the same.
But it was like, it was on a table,
so they were like, this is a spirit arm levitating table.
So they're like tying three things together,
table turning, levitating, and spirit photography.
Those are great, I think the spirit photography,
just because they were taking advantage
of this new technology, people didn't even understand.
Right, it was like the deepfake of the time.
And they were probably like,
everybody we got maybe three years.
Yeah, we'd better get prolific.
And then everyone's gonna be like,
oh, that's just double exposure.
Right, and then people, like I said earlier too,
a lot of the New Age stuff,
that's tied into spiritualism today,
like tarot readings or, oh, I don't know, astrology,
that kind of stuff, that had nothing to do with this,
because spiritualists, all of it grew out of Christianity.
So there was some Christian basis
to all of the spiritualist practices.
And even though in a lot of ways,
it was extraordinarily heretical,
there was no religious leader in charge of anything,
there was no scripture or doctrine or anything like that.
It was still very much tied into
and born out of Christianity.
So stuff like occult things would have been
very much frowned upon by spiritualists.
Totally, should we take another break?
I think we should.
All right, we'll take another break
and tell you about what the Civil War
had to do with all of this, right after this.
And we'll see you in the next video.
Bye.
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 slipdresses and choker necklaces.
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, friends and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
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 flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
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, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 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.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, 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 I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right.
So, uh, pre-Civil War in the United States, spiritualism was popular.
It was booming, uh, but it was more like the kind of thing that you did in a theater and you would go see it as a curiosity or you might just maybe even knew it was fake and it was just entertainment.
There wasn't a lot going on back then.
Kind of like looking at, um, penguins in a zoo today.
Like, you know they're fake, but it's still fun to look at.
Right.
Why not go pay a nickel to see Madam, whatever, do her little, do her little erotic, uh, because we'll get into that.
These got a little sexy at times, too.
Your little ghost shimmy.
This is part of the draw, the ghost shimmy.
But, um, we need to talk about a couple of things here, the Civil War for sure, but, um, one of the things that was going on, you know, we've been talking about a lot about the Northeastern United States, and there's a very good reason it didn't take hold in the South.
It's because, uh, the way Christianity was, and some might argue still is in the South, didn't leave a lot of room.
Um, the hierarchy didn't leave a lot of room for other schools of thought, and it was basically, even though it wasn't necessarily a cult, it was just shut down, kind of from the beginning in the South.
They're like, we'll stick to our voodoo, thank you very much.
Exactly.
Keep that spiritualism stuff out.
Yeah, so it was just not a big thing in the South.
Um, the, uh, mediums at the time would, uh, move off the stage sometimes and have these private seances.
Oh yeah.
Uh, sometimes they would get in touch with a family member, but oftentimes it would just be kind of the same in the state, as the state show, they would say like, I'm going to get in touch with Sammy Davis Jr. or whatever the popular dead figure at the time was.
Sure.
Um, but that was for like pre-Civil War.
It was an entertainment, it was an amusement, but when the Civil War came, a lot of people died in the Civil War, and that means that a lot of people who survived the Civil War lost a loved one.
And these might have been people who, you know, went off to fight and just never came back, never heard from again, know nothing, have no idea where they died, where they were buried.
And so that kind of grief, you know, that transcends any kind of time or place.
And it created a lot of people, a large population of people who were very interested in getting in touch with their dead relative.
And it just so happened that at the time there was a movement, a foot, that said, oh, well, this guy over here is actually really good at getting in touch with the dead.
Why don't you have a seance with him?
You just have to, you know, pay him to do this work, because it is a lot of work, whether you are a believer in a skeptic, it's a lot of work to have been a medium during this time.
And so they would be paid, and they would make a living like this. And so these seances, these performances were decreased in size, but vastly increased in frequency.
Yeah, a lot more spiritualists doing smaller mediums for families, or smaller seances for families.
And this same thing happened after World War One as well.
So it's, you know, it's kind of all fun and games until it gets to this level. If it's a big theater show, fine, whatever, go pay your money and get entertained for an hour.
But when you are taking people's money, who have lost loved ones in battle, then that's when it gets kind of really ugly, if you ask me.
Right. And that's where I think a lot of the genuine skeptics who beat this kind of stuff to a pulp, that's the place that they're coming from.
You know, not necessarily that it's like in front of science or reason or common sense or anything like that, but that there are a lot of people who have parted money from people who were bereaved at the time.
And you just, you don't take advantage of people who are undergoing grief. That's a pretty shoddy thing to do.
That's a life lesson right there for everybody listening, especially the youngsters.
Not only that, not only taking their money, but I imagine in a lot of cases, people made real life decisions based on things that would happen in these seances, you know.
Right. It's true.
Like sell the family farm, like stuff like that.
Oh God, I hadn't thought about that. And not only sell the family farm, sell it to me, the medium. That's what your dead brother wants you to do.
For what? Something's coming through. They're saying, penny's on the dollar.
That's great.
Oh wait, that's the opposite of great.
Yeah, that's terrible.
So by the end of the 20th century, things started to decline a bit.
One was just pure greed. There were too many of them out there. They were all trying to outdo one another.
They were trying to draw bigger crowds and more money and they were getting more outrageous by doing so.
Yeah.
And that meant just like anything when you try and do that, the bigger you try to force something to be, sometimes that can lead to its kind of early death, I guess.
Yeah. Go big or go home, but eventually you're going to go home anyway.
That's the end of that saying. I love that.
Right. So part of it was that they were making more and more audacious claims, but also there were more and more scientists, like those that open-minded scientific approach had become a lot more hardened toward spiritualism and mediums.
Because so many had been investigated and found to just be total frauds, most of the time the outcome was the medium couldn't reproduce this ectoplasm or get in touch with the spirit when they were under controlled conditions.
Or they went for it and they were found to be a fraud, like the knuckle of their toe was found to be wrapping on a stool or something like that.
And so as these reports kept coming out more and more, these scientific investigators were like, I don't think any of this is real.
And they would be interviewed in newspapers and the papers would run these articles.
And so over time, just the general public kind of turned away from spiritualism as hokom and bunk.
But the thing is, is not everyone did. And even still today, go ask Dan Aykroyd, there is a group of people who adhere to spiritualism as a religion.
No, for sure. And one of the big reasons that it didn't completely go away was spiritualists were very smart in that they would use influencers of the day in their act.
They would seek out these well-known people. They would tour the world sometimes, tour Europe and do seances with like royal families of various countries.
The newspapers write about this. They would get a quote or maybe demand a quote from someone like well-known and they would say, all right, I'll come do a seance.
But you got to give me a quote that I can use on my flyer or whatever.
What's that called?
No, that fallacy, the logical fallacy, appeal to authority, I think.
Yeah, the appeal to authority, sure.
Yeah, which makes a lot of sense that people see, oh, well, they did a seance for the Prince of Monaco or Sammy Davis Jr.
Then it's got to be good enough for me. It's not pseudoscience at all.
Because why would Sammy Davis Jr. believe in pseudoscience?
Right. He's just a Satanist. He doesn't care about pseudoscience.
That's right.
So one of the other authorities that they would appeal to, Chuck, was what this one, there's an expose written in 1897.
And by God, if I can't find it anywhere in my tabs, but it was basically, oh, revelations of a spirit medium is what it was called.
And it was written anonymously by a medium, a huckster, a fraud.
And I'm pretty sure it was published in 1897.
And it is like 400 pages exposing all the tips and all that stuff, all the tricks.
But there's a glossary of like 19th century slang words among hoaxters. It's amazing.
But one of them was the top heavy. And that was a scientist who was over-credentialed.
They had all these PhDs and everything like that. So they were book smart, but they were super gullible.
And if you could get a top heavy to basically say like, I can't explain it, science can't explain it.
That would go a very long way to bolstering your career, you know?
Yeah. Even if you talk to 100 scientists and one of them was a top heavy who'd said something valuable to you.
That's the only one. You're the 10th dentist of the nine out of 10 dentists.
Right. Exactly. Exactly.
And that's all you need, especially if the other nine dentists just keep their traps shut because they have better things to do.
But there were a bunch of people who would not keep their traps shut.
I guess actually one of the legendary top heavy, even though he wasn't a scientist, credentialed or otherwise, was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
I don't know what's wrong with me. I'm sorry. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle?
By the way, before I forget, if there's not a band called the 10th dentist out there, then I don't know what to think anymore.
That's a good one. Remember those trident commercials? I think it was four out of five dentists.
That was a four out of five?
He was bit on the testicles by a squirrel before he could pronounce how, before he could recommend dentine or trident or something like that.
Maybe it should be the fifth. It is four out of five. It's not nine out of 10.
Do you remember that, though?
No.
It was a great, great, very shocking.
What was it? We make holes in teeth.
Oh yeah.
Remember that, the cartoon?
That was Crest.
Oh, okay.
Do you want to hear the pinnacle of 80s marketing to kids?
Sure.
My third grade, maybe fourth grade class put on a play about...
Toothpaste.
Yes, and cavities, sponsored by Crest.
Yeah, they had a big push back then for taking over the minds of American children.
Well, it worked. What's funny is, is I now use aquafresh, the orange tube.
Oh man. If there is a favorite toothpaste that any boy in America has ever had, that is it in its mind.
That was from the 80s?
No, it is now. But I'm saying the Crest takeover of my mind didn't work.
Gotcha.
I'm an aquafish boy now.
Is that the one with the tricolor?
Yeah, which is another very appealing part of it.
Man, you'd buy it all, don't you?
I do.
So gullible.
Yeah, I am a little gullible.
You're like an Arthur Conan Doyle.
So he, if you recognize his name, he was the author of Sherlock Holmes, of course.
He was super into this.
He joined the Society for Psychical Research, which was an early skeptical slash believer society.
And he always, he bought into this. He was just convinced.
But on the other side of the equation were skeptics who were not convinced,
who basically didn't keep their mouth shut.
They were the other four who would say like, no, everybody actually, this guy's wrong.
My esteemed colleague has been taken.
But then the head of those guys was Harry Houdini, amazingly enough.
Yeah, Houdini, which makes it super ironic that at the Magic Castle in Los Angeles,
they have long had Harry Houdini seance nights where you can go into the Harry Houdini room
and do a seance, which is, you know, it's all for fun.
But it is kind of funny that he was very much against this stuff.
Although supposedly, if you go to the Magic Castle, they'll tell you that he did,
and he may have really done this, is told his wife before he died that, hey, listen,
if I was wrong, I'll come back and I'll contact you and let you know.
You're right.
And he came back and he said, I've got good news and I've got bad news.
The good news is there is a heaven.
The bad news is you're scheduled to pitch there tonight.
You remember that scary story to tell in the dark book?
Yeah.
Where was that?
What that was from?
It was like two friends who played baseball together.
Yeah.
We had a pact like Harry Houdini and his wife, apparently.
I think that's a, there's different versions of that joke though.
Man, the illustrations in that book were just bar none.
Yeah.
That was great stuff.
And by the way, we should give a big rest in peace to Mr. Mort Drucker who passed away.
Oh yeah.
A couple of weeks ago in real time, but that was, that was a big one.
We talk about Mad Magazine a lot and Mort Drucker was my number one with a bullet favorite artist.
Agreed.
And he passed on and he was one of the greats.
He definitely shaped my childhood in a very large way.
Yeah.
Big time.
With his drawings.
RIP sir.
Yeah.
Nice.
We'll hear from you soon.
Right.
He's like, you guys are pitching tonight.
Oh no, both of us?
So, so Harry Houdini is like, yeah, Josh is going to flub it and Chuck's going to have to be brought in for the save.
So Harry Houdini created this longstanding tradition of stage magicians exposing the fraud of spiritualism basically.
Yeah.
Because they were, they're like, they're stealing our tricks.
Yeah.
And it's pretty cool.
Like he would incorporate into his stage shows a lot of these things that spiritualists were doing to show how they did it.
And he was relentless at it.
Yeah.
He was very relentless.
But it was very cool.
And the fact that it's still going on today, Richard Wiseman, who's come up a few times, he was in the Sheldrake episode.
He was in the ghosts episode.
And I think we somehow misconstrued his research in the ghost episode to suggest that he had proven ghosts exist.
I don't remember exactly the details of it, but we got that one wrong.
But in this case, he has recreated seances from the 19th century and has shown how willing people are to totally misreport the events that went on in the seance.
To say that, yes, you know, the table did levitate or all the stuff that he's studying under these controlled conditions.
And it's basically shown not just that the medium himself or more often herself, as we'll see, was engaging in fraud,
but also that the audience had a willing suspension of disbelief and were part of this too by saying like,
I felt the phantom arm tap me on the shoulder.
The medium didn't have anything to do with that.
That was just something that kind of came out of the environment that was produced in the seance, you know?
Yeah, pretty interesting.
It is pretty interesting.
So we'll finish up here with this.
I thought this was very interesting, actually, the social implications of this.
Most of the, not all, but a lot of these spiritualists were women in the 19th century for some practical reasons.
They could wear these long dresses that could hide talented toe knuckles.
They would not because of the time they wouldn't get like searched too closely, obviously, because you wouldn't do that.
If you were a scientist trying to examine whether or not a spiritualist was real or not.
And that led to, there were men for sure, but that led to this kind of interesting side note.
One is that women could make their own money.
And so it's easy to poo poo something like this, but I'm sure those Fox sisters made a lot more dough than they ever could have as, you know, doing anything else offered and available to them at the time.
Sure.
So that's a good thing.
They gave them some agency, but these, it was no coincidence that sometimes the voice from the other side would champion sort of progressive views because this turned out to be a chance to sort of reshape policy in a way.
If you were a woman and you were a spiritualist, it would be very easy to say, you know, they're saying that women should have more rights.
And if not, they will come back and haunt you all.
Right.
And that kind of ended up happening in some ways.
Yeah.
There was a huge connection between spiritualism and spiritualist movement and abolitionism, the women's suffrage movement, the women's temper, the temperance movement.
Yeah.
And a lot of these progressive women's workers rights and that, you know, if you were an abolitionist and you didn't believe in this kind of thing, you might be like, I'm not really happy about that.
But at the same time, it kind of whipped up this fervor in that some people would like their spirits that were being channeled by the medium were saying things like, you guys better get on the train of abolitionism.
You better get rid of slavery. And it actually did, especially in these theatrical settings, have a widespread influence on getting the message out there through the spirit communication weirdly enough.
Yeah.
It's almost like one could say anything at all at something like, oh, I don't know, a campaign rally and people would believe it if they were an ardent enough believer in the speaker.
Exactly, especially if they'd attach their ego to you and your success.
Very strange.
So I just want to give two shouts out, one to the probably the greatest ghost movie that involves seances ever.
Ghost?
No.
Whoopie Goldberg?
No.
All right.
The others with Nicole Kidman?
Yeah, that was good.
So good.
Don't spoil it.
The greatest short story involving seances and the spiritualist movement written by arguably the greatest American writer of all time, Joyce Carol Oates.
It's called Night Side.
Sure.
It's a short story.
It's the same title as a collection of her short stories from the 70s, I think 1977.
Night Side, look it up and thank me later.
It's seriously just bone-chilling how good it is.
I wonder if we could get in touch with her and read that for our Halloween episode this year.
I tweeted to her once kind of crassly and never heard anything back even though she was on Twitter.
I know she saw that tweet.
Hey, at Joyce Carol Oates, you think you're so cool?
Right.
I would love to read that one.
There's another one too.
She's probably not just the greatest American writer, but the greatest American horror writer too.
She's great.
She's so wonderful.
I would read any of her stories.
So if you out there know Joyce Carol Oates or in contact with her or her publisher, please, we would love to read in our ad-free episode one of her short stories for Halloween.
That's right.
So I think she might like that aspect.
Okay.
Oh, one last thing, Chuck.
There's a place called Lilydale in New York appropriately enough, which is basically a spiritualist community where you can go basically be among spiritualists as a religion today.
Wonderful.
Since I said today, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm going to call this, we haven't gotten emails in two weeks from people because something's wrong with our email server.
Yeah.
So it's on bidets again.
You're going to get a couple on bidets, I think.
All right.
Hey guys, listening to your recent episode on bidets reminded me of a funny story I thought you might like.
2004, my family bought a new house in the suburbs of Detroit.
It was designed and built by an exceptionally pragmatic, efficient, yet lacking in aesthetic appreciation engineer.
To our surprise, my husband's delight as he is from Spain, the master bathroom included a separate bidet unit.
Now remember, this is 2004 and people were not as familiar in this country.
Most people that visited our home had no idea what it was, and we also made the decision to not give advance notice when they went to the bathroom.
Invariably, people would emerge from the bathroom trip either a little wet or with an embarrassed look on their face as they confessed to having explored the contraption and released a stream of water onto themselves.
And into our bathroom was always good for a laugh.
I sure appreciate you guys when we moved from Michigan to the South Carolina.
What?
I said peace out.
Was she once Miss South Carolina?
Because that would explain that last bit.
No, I thought it was she met the South and I didn't see on the next line it said Carolina, so that was just me.
Oh, okay.
Your voice has accompanied us as we made many 12-hour trips back and forth.
We enjoyed the knowledge and the tangents, even the tangents.
And now you continue to soothe and educate me as I go on my four to five mile recreational walks during the pandemic quarantine and temporary, hopefully furlough.
And that is from Michelle Salcedo.
Nice.
Thanks a lot, Michelle.
We're glad to know that you're doing okay there, hanging out, waiting for things to get back to normal.
In the South Carolina.
That's right, Chuck.
And as it will eventually go back to normal.
And in the meantime, if you want to get in touch with us like Michelle did to let us know some silly story about a bidet or what have you, you can get in touch with us.
Send us an email to stuffpodcastandhowstuffworks.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more podcasts from I Heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio 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 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.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.