Stuff You Should Know - How the Stanford Prison Experiment Worked
Episode Date: July 5, 2018The infamous Stanford Prison Experiment wasn't really much of an experiment as it turns out. It was more like a poorly thought out exercise conducted by a professor who didn't dot the i's and cross th...e t's. Listen in as Josh and Chuck give this experiment some harsh treatment of their own. 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.
Hey everyone, we're coming to Salt Lake City, Utah
in Phoenix, Arizona this fall.
Yeah, October 23rd, we're gonna be at Salt Lake City's
Grand Theater, and then the next night, October 24th,
we'll be in Phoenix, and we added a second show
to our Melbourne show, right?
That's right, a second earlier show in Melbourne,
so you can get all the information for all of these shows
at sysklive.com.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and this is Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and Jerry's over there, so why don't you pull up a chair,
kick back, and tell us about your problems,
because this is psychology stuff.
We should just call this episode
the Stanford Prison Experiment,
AKA, perhaps the hackiest experiment of all time,
and it's really not an experiment anyway.
No, but it's the most famous psychology experiment ever.
Yeah, I got kind of ticked off
while I was researching this.
Yeah, you should, man.
Because I used to think it was cool,
like, oh man, what a cool experiment.
Yeah, everybody's evil at the core.
Yeah, then I researched it, and I was like,
this is a bunch of BS.
All of it.
This is one of the worst executed experiments
I've ever heard of.
That is so funny, because while I was researching this,
I was like, I'm gonna have to keep it together,
maybe at the end I can really go off or whatever.
Yeah, let's go off at the beginning.
That's great, man.
I watched the movie today, too.
The 2015 one?
Yeah.
How was Billy Crudup?
Because I loved him and almost famous.
Well, I'm a fan.
He was good.
But I don't know, the movie A was pretty sensationalized
as far as the violence.
They showed a lot of straight up physical violence
in the movie, which supposedly didn't occur.
Like beating them with Billy Clubs
and hog tying them in real violence.
Hollywood.
Actually, these days I should say Atlanta.
Yeah.
Yollywood is what they call it.
Oh, there you go, perfect.
That's perfect.
That sounds like a Norman Reedus creation.
Yeah, might have been.
Shout out to Norman Reedus.
And then, what was I saying?
Oh, I don't feel like it came down hard enough on this yahoo.
What was the guy's name?
Zimbardo.
Yeah, Zimbardo for just crafting a really poor,
doing a very poor job at crafting
a supposedly scientific experiment.
No, he was like the driving force
behind that movie getting made.
Apparently, he'd been trying to get a movie made in America.
He seems to be a pretty shameless self-promoter.
Decades, yes.
It's not a good quality in a social psychologist.
No.
So we're gonna see, I guess we'll let the cat out of the bag,
but we shall see that the Stanford Prison Experiment,
one of the most famous experiments
in the annals of psychology.
It's not an experiment at all.
No.
It's findings are wide open to interpretation.
And it was conducted by a showman, basically.
Yeah, I mean, you know it's a red flag
when you don't publish your findings in a medical journal,
you publish them in New York, was it New York Magazine?
New York Times Magazine.
The Hodgman's rag.
Well, great rag, but that's not the place
to go publish scientific findings.
No, peer-reviewed journals are.
And they circumvented that.
But for very good reasons.
All right, so let's talk about the outline.
So let's go back to the beginning, right?
Yeah, back to the year of my birth, 1971.
And Stanford, at Stanford University.
Sure.
Which is what, Palo Alto?
Yeah.
Fighting sequoias.
What is there?
They have like a big old sequoia on their logo.
I think it's like, and then they have a sequoia
with its fists up, or is that a leprechaun?
Oh, that's Notre Dame, I'm thinking of.
I do feel like it has something to do with trees.
Chuck's looking it up, everybody, so let me stall.
It is a tree, the Stanford tree?
Well, I don't know what the mascot is,
but there's definitely a tree associated.
No, I looked it up, the Stanford tree.
Oh, okay, cool.
And the first question is, why is it a tree?
Uh-huh, well, what's the answer?
Well, I mean, I'm sure it's just because of where it is
in California, but that doesn't answer the real question,
which is, why would you have a tree?
Right, Phillips and Bartos sitting there like,
quit stalling, get to the heckling.
He's still around.
Yeah, he is.
All right, we're at Stanford, it's 1971.
Yeah, we're actually in the basement
of one of the buildings at Stanford University.
I think like Campbell Hall or something like that.
And I think August of 1971, there were 24 young men,
almost all of them, I think one of them was Asian American.
And they are doing something pretty bizarre
in this basement in August of 1971.
They've been divided into two groups, guards and prisoners.
Supposedly average kids.
Right, and they are acting out this basically role-playing
game of guards versus prisoners.
For 15 bucks a day.
In a simulated prison in the basement of this hall
at Stanford University.
Yeah, which would be about $93 today,
funded by the U.S. Office of Naval Research.
Is that right?
So it'd be 93 bucks a day.
And it was originally gonna be two weeks,
so I'm sure some of these guys were like, heck yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I kind of forgot
what it was like to be a college student.
That'd be, you know what, between 12 and 1400 bucks
starting off your summer.
It'd be about $1300 and $2 if my quick math is correct.
Good scratch.
Yeah.
For a 21 year old.
Yeah, two weeks on summer break.
That's right.
So you were divided into two lots, like you said.
They asked people supposedly what you wanted to be
unless this was purely a movie creation.
And they did try and look up
and try and find out the differences.
Yeah.
But they supposedly asked them and most everyone said,
or in fact everyone said prisoner.
And one of the reactions from who ended up
being the bad guard, the guy said they asked them why
and he's like, because nobody likes guards.
Right.
He's like, why would anyone want to be a guard?
Because they thought we'll just be prisoners
because they just will lay around and smoke cigarettes.
Right.
So we'll unpack what that suggests later on.
Sure.
Okay, so you've got these guys
and they're down here for this experiment.
And so coming at it from the way,
this is the popular interpretation
of what happened at the Stanford Prison Experiment, okay?
Yes.
You've got 12 guards and 12 prisoners.
The prisoners had been arrested by the way.
By the real Palo Alto police.
Yeah, they weren't told when,
but like the real cops came by,
arrested each one of them for a variety of crimes.
Booked them at the Palo Alto police station
and then transported them to the jail,
the fake jail at Stanford.
Yeah, they call it the Stanford County Jail.
And they did a legit job.
They put up signs.
They had these rooms decked out like jail cells.
They had a hole.
They did a really believable job
of making this seem like a prison environment at least.
Right.
So you've got these prisoners who've been delivered.
You've got these guards who are waiting there for them.
And as far as Zimbardo has ever said,
these guards were told you have to protect the prison
and everything else is up to you.
The only rule is there's no physical punishment.
We're just here to observe.
Yeah, like here's your uniforms.
Here's your sunglasses.
Yeah, and then the prisoners were booked in
with wearing smocks.
Yeah.
No shoes, no underwear.
Yeah, naked under the smocks.
Chained at the ankles.
And then they wore like those stocking cap do rags.
They had a panty on their head.
To simulate they're having their head shaved.
Right.
And this is the early 70s.
So most of them had these big aphros and long hair
and stuff under these panties.
Right.
So this is like at first everything's pretty normal.
The guards don't quite know what to do.
They're a little timid.
The prisoners apparently relished this immediately
and started like finding where the guards boundaries were.
And they started to band together.
And there was actually, I think on day two,
the turnover from day one to two,
there was a prisoner riot.
Yeah, I mean they, like you said,
they were sort of laughing at first.
And I think we didn't mention two.
And this is, we'll end up being very, very problematic.
And the first sign that he didn't do a good job,
Zimbardo actually acted as the superintendent of the prison,
involved himself in his own experiment.
And had one of, he had some graduate assistants
that were assisting in the program.
They acted as a parole board and one of them was the warden.
That was, yeah, a undergrad actually.
Oh, were they undergrad assistants?
Well, the warden, Jaffe, his last name was Jaffe.
He was an undergrad at the time.
And actually he had come up with the experiment on his own.
Oh, he was the guy, huh?
And then Zimbardo was like,
this is a really good idea, let's do this for real.
Imagine the press.
So yeah, like you said, it escalated pretty quickly
after kind of laughing at first.
These guards got into their roles, to say the least.
And really kind of started being jerks in quick order.
And after the prisoners were like,
hey, this is kind of funny, like you're being,
you're not being very cool.
And they were, you know, kind of smack down
and made to do things like push-ups and jumping jacks.
And they would withhold food
and eventually they would like take their beds away
from them and stuff.
Like it just got worse and worse.
And there was, I think like you said,
on day two, an uprising.
They got together, threw the cots off their beds
and threw the bed frames against the door
and wouldn't let them in.
Right, so there was a prisoner riot.
That's pretty significant, right?
And what's equally significant is that the guards
by the second day started to show signs
of like real cruelty toward the prisoners.
They started treating them very poorly.
They started engaging in basically acts of torture,
like waking them up randomly in the middle of the night,
making them get up.
Like you said, push-ups, which is interpreted
as physical punishment.
Because again, you couldn't hit them with the rubber hose.
You couldn't hit them with the baton.
You couldn't punch them.
But if you make somebody do a bunch of push-ups,
that's physical punishment too.
Yeah.
And it was within the bounds apparently.
Yeah, they were referred to only by their prison numbers.
They would never say their names.
They were made to memorize everyone else's prison number
and like they would line them up and tell them
to repeat their numbers for like an hour.
If they didn't do it fast enough
and then in reverse order, they would get punishment.
They would do the kind of the classic moves
of holding one responsible for the punishment of others.
Yeah, that's a big one.
Like if you didn't make your bed good enough
and no one could go to sleep, stuff like that.
The guards also innovated the carrots here or there too.
They actually made one cell like a good cell.
Like they put a bed in it with like bedding.
If you were in that cell, you were eligible
for like good meals, better than what the other prisoners had.
And there were room for three inmates in there at a time.
And so it instilled this sense of competition
and skull-duggery, I guess, backstabbery
among the prisoners to curry favor with the guards,
like by informing on the other ones
so that you could get a chance to be in like the nice cell.
Yeah, and I think even before that,
like when they went to stage the uprising,
I don't think there were three rooms of three,
and I think six of them, two of the rooms participated,
and one of the rooms did not.
And because not all the prisoners like rebelled as much,
some of them just kind of went along with it.
Interestingly, some of the guards
did not descend into cruelty.
They actually, some of them did like favors,
went out of their way to be nice to the prisoners,
but the Grabster who wrote this article
points out very significantly,
they didn't stand up to the cruel guards
or officially object to their behavior.
They went along with it, but then-
Because they thought they had to.
In their own, right, in their own way,
they did what they could to retain their humanity.
So there are two huge points,
and one of them, there's one among the guards
and one among the prisoners,
and the one among the prisoners comes 36 hours
after the beginning of the experiment.
And this prisoner, his name,
it would later be revealed was Douglas Corpy.
He had an emotional breakdown, a nervous breakdown,
36 hours after this experiment starts.
One of the prisoners becomes so emotionally involved
in this simulated prison at this cruelty,
the simulated supposedly cruelty of the guards
that he had a nervous breakdown.
Well.
And had to be removed from the experiment.
And this is like, this is Zimbardo's,
this is the official line for the Stanford Prison Experiment.
Oh, so it's still playing along.
Right, and has been for decades.
Yeah, he also said that one of them broke out
in a psychosomatic rash.
There was all manner of various levels
of psychological breakdowns happening.
On the other side, the big star among the guards
was a guy named John Wayne, who you referenced earlier.
Yeah, his name was Dave Eshelman.
And he was the one who, he was the ringleader.
He's the one that came out as the most brutal guard
of them all, and all the other guards
kind of fell in line behind him
and took their cues from him.
So this whole thing's going on.
This is crazy town.
This place in six days, six days,
this thing descends into chaos.
Supposed to be two weeks.
Yes, there was rumors that there was going to be a breakout.
And so they moved the experiment.
There were that guy, Douglas Corpee,
who had a nervous breakdown,
ended up getting put into the hole,
this broom closet for, I think, overnight.
And was finally released because the researchers
that actually stepped in and said,
you should probably let him out.
It was just utter chaos.
And then eventually, Philip Zimbardo's girlfriend
at the time, a woman named Christine Maslach.
Yeah, his wife-to-be.
Oh, she married him, huh?
Yeah, still married.
So she came and just dropped in
to see how things were going and was so outraged
at what she saw that she was like,
you're so far beyond the line.
You have to stop this now.
Like, this is descended into chaos.
You can't do this.
These people are treating these prisoners horribly.
Like, how are you letting this go on?
And he went, I'm okay.
Right, fine.
And so the next day, he canceled the experiment.
Again, after six days,
and it was scheduled to go on for two weeks.
And so he comes out, tells the world
in this New York Times magazine,
guys, if I took you, Josh, and I took you, Chuck,
and put you as guard and prisoner
in even a simulated prison,
and put a smock on Josh and took his underwear off,
and put a stocking on his head,
and gave Chuck a baton and some glasses,
Chuck would beat Josh up,
and Josh would probably have his spirit broken
and have a nervous breakdown.
It's in everybody.
Evil is in everybody.
Crumbling at the first sign of adversity is in everybody.
We're all just pathetic weaklings.
Stanford Prison Experiment.
And he ran off and said, I'm famous.
All right, that's a great setup.
So we'll take a break here and come back
and talk a little bit about the,
more about the experiment and the realities of it
right after this.
We'll see you in the next one.
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.
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, 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 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, 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 Podcasts
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right, so you've got John Wayne in there.
I don't think we mentioned that he took on the persona
of the prison boss in Cool Hand Luke.
He did a fake Southern accent and everything
and dove right into this role.
If you talk to Dave Eshelman today, he will say,
he's very much on record of saying, I'm not some jerk
and I didn't get off on being sadistic.
He said, I wanted to do what they paid me $15 a day to do,
which was to be a prison guard and to treat these guys poorly.
And so he said, I did some drama in high school
and I literally acted this part as well as I could.
I felt was expected and wanted from me.
Right, and I put on this fake Southern accent
and if you asked friends and family today,
they would laugh at this
because I'm really not this guy at all.
Right, because he really comes off as a bit of a villain
in this movie for sure.
Well, he perpetrated real cruelty on other people
and we'll get to that later.
He said he feels bad about it too.
And he should because the other people actually did suffer
under this guy's leadership
as the ring leader of the mean guards.
Like they wore pink on Wednesday.
It was terrible everywhere, right?
So he really should feel bad and apparently he does.
I saw that all over the place too, that he feels bad for it.
But the point is, is that he has said,
like this didn't happen organically.
Like I felt encouraged to play this role.
Right.
That's a big deal because the findings
of the Stanford Prison Experiment say,
if you take some people and say, you're a guard,
give them some power and you will turn evil.
They will turn evil within a day.
A day they said about this guy.
And this guy's like, no, I was just, like you said,
doing my job but they were paying me 15 bucks a day for.
Let's put that one to the side.
Right, put a pin in that.
Let's go visit with Douglas Corpey who was the prisoner
who in 36 short hours of this simulated prison experiment
lost his marbles and had a nervous breakdown
and had to go home, right?
One of the other two pillars of the findings
that people are either evil or easily crumble
in the face of adversity from the Stanford Prison Experiment.
And again, this is how this thing's been taught
for like 50 years, okay?
Yeah, so Corpey comes out and says, I was faking that.
And I put on a big act so I could get out of there
because it sucked.
And I didn't want to be there anymore.
So I faked like I was, and he like one of his quotes was,
I don't have it here, but he basically said like,
any trained clinician would have been able
to see right through this.
Like when I hear the tapes years later,
it's like I'm not an actor.
I wasn't like apparently the John Wayne guy
at least had been in like high school plays.
And college too, I think.
Yeah, and he was like, I was not an actor.
And it was so clear to me looking back at these tapes
that I was faking it.
Faking a nervous breakdown.
Yeah, faking a nervous breakdown to get out of there.
Right, so the reason why he said later
that he did fake this nervous breakdown
is because he took the job
because he thought he'd just be laying around.
Like you said, smoke and cigarettes being a prisoner.
And he would get to study for the GRE.
He was about to enter grad school.
I didn't see that.
Well, they said, no, you can't have your books.
No, they didn't give him anything.
And this guy was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, wait a minute.
This is day one.
He's like, whoa, whoa, whoa, like I need those books.
I'm taking the GRE basically leaving here after two weeks
and going to take the test.
Like I've got to spend this two weeks studying.
They're like, you can't have your books.
So he quickly saw that the only way out
was to fake this nervous breakdown.
And Billy crewed up one other and said,
why is everyone saying, whoa, whoa, whoa?
Only I can say, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Yeah, so we've kind of pooped the two major findings
from the study already.
So that's a huge deal, right?
Because again, the idea is that if you put people,
any random people, remember,
these are just average like middle-class white kids.
Which is another problem.
Right, if you put, if you put any,
well, 1971, that means everybody.
That's the whole world, right?
If you put anybody in the world in this situation,
they're going to either turn evil or lose their marbles.
So those are the two findings.
That's what everybody took it as at first.
It later came out, no, this guy was acting.
This guy was faking.
So what else do we have then?
Well, we have this idea that Zimbardo
insinuated himself as part of the experiment.
And that actually created the findings
from the Stanford Prison Experiment.
So should we put a pin in that?
Or you wanna talk about that now?
No, no, I wanna go where you wanna go.
All right, let's put a pin in that then
and talk about a little bit more
about what went on that week.
They had everything from visitation.
Like you could write a letter to your family
or girlfriend or whoever you wanted to come visit you
to ask for visitation rights.
And the family came in and they did.
They came in and visited for an hour
and there were in some cases parents
who were like, I don't know about this.
This seems like a really weird thing.
And Zimbardo would be like, oh no, it's totally fine.
I'm a psychologist.
Yeah, like they wanna be here, like ask them.
And the kids, they did say that they wanted to stay.
Okay.
Which is important.
Okay, so what else is important?
Like no one in the visiting hour,
I don't think we're like, get me out of here.
They're all like, no, this is all part of the act.
Okay.
Essentially.
All right.
They had parole hearings inside the course of a week
somehow, they said that if they could be released,
if they would forfeit the money,
and this is after, I don't know how many of the six days,
but they could not get paid and be paroled
if they went in front of the parole board.
They went in front of the parole board, some of them did.
And most of the prisoners said that
they would give up their money, in fact.
And the parole members, like I said,
they were the graduate assistants.
They even had one former prisoner,
this guy that was a 15 year,
Sam Quentin.
Yeah, inmate, 15 or 17 year inmate on the board
that I guess Zimbardo, I wanna call him Zamboni.
So he actually was a friend of Jaffe's,
the guy who originally actually conceived
of this experiment as an undergrad.
So he brought him in on it.
Right, so he was on the parole board,
and he was kind of one of the ones,
at least in the film version,
that was kind of saying like, no, this is like how it is.
Like you should keep it going.
Right.
But I don't know how much of that was dramatized.
I don't either.
That's one of the problems with this,
is so much of the documentation
has been not released over the years,
and when it does get released,
it contradicts the official line.
And it's very tough to separate truth from fiction,
especially when you introduce a Hollywood movie
into the whole thing just to drive those nails
in the coffin too of reality, in fact.
There's been a lot of, in the year since,
a lot of complaints that a lot of these kids were screaming,
I wanna go home, I wanna go home.
And for his part, Zimbardo said, in the contract,
it says, I want to exit the experiment,
is the official line to say, and they could have gone home.
And he was like, but you hear,
no one ever said I want to exit the experiment.
They would say, I want my mommy, or I'm going crazy,
or my god, please stop this, please stop this.
But they never said those exact words.
The safe phrase.
Yeah, the safe phrase,
but it turns out that's bunk too, right?
Yeah, it turns out that if you look at the contract
that they had, that he's referencing this,
that say the rules and everything in the agreement,
there's no safe word to be mentioned.
Certainly doesn't say if you say,
I want to quit the experiment,
you get released from the experiment.
So he's just flat out lying about that then.
That's from what I understand, yes.
And what article was this that you sent?
There's a really good takedown in Medium
called the Lifespan of a Lie.
Yeah, it's a good one.
And it's based on, that title's based on a,
I think a documentary by a,
a documentary or a book by a French filmmaker,
which, who titled his version, The Birth of a Lie.
And it's basically about how the Stanford Prison Experiment
was just basically, it was bunk from the get-go,
which we'll kind of pick that apart in a little bit.
And that, it's just fascinatingly
has been perpetuated over again, basically 50 years.
It just entered the cultural zeitgeist
and just stayed like an infection.
All right, some other things that happened
to make it realistic.
They brought in a lawyer when parents asked for one
and played along like it was real.
They brought in a chaplain who came in
to speak to prisoners and he played along with it too.
They basically did everything that you would think
would happen in a real prison on a slightly scaled down level.
Right, but the upshot of all of this
is Zimbardo saying like,
do you see what's going on here, everybody?
Like, I just put some guys in,
like nine guys in at a time or 12 guys as guards,
12 guys as prisoners,
and their parents came for visiting hours.
A lawyer came.
That's how real the simulated prison became
in people's minds.
Just imagine what a real prison's like, right?
So, and he was saying they could have left at any time
if they just said the safe word
and no one ever said the safe word.
There is some evidence that these people
were basically kept there against their will,
especially after Douglas Corpey basically faked
his emotional breakdown
and then was thrown into a broom closet
in retaliation for it.
He should have very clearly should have been left
or allowed to leave.
And to even be led to think that you couldn't leave,
which is apparently the idea
that spread throughout the prisoners,
that would be like keeping someone against their will.
Yeah, and he did leave,
but was supposed to agreed to come back supposedly
to play a different role as a prisoner
who maybe escaped and came back, I think,
but didn't come back.
Right, and I think five people were released early
before the whole experiment was called off.
All prisoners, no guards left the experiment,
which is telling.
Yeah, well, they were working in shifts though,
which is important.
Okay, that is a big one too.
But if you consider that no one asked to be a guard,
they all asked to be prisoners,
but then none of the guards left the experiment.
To me, that's interesting on its face, right?
There's something to that.
But the whole thing just kind of falling apart
after Zimbardo's girlfriend at the time came.
The idea that up to this point,
these people had engaged in this fantasy
and thought that they couldn't leave
when they really could,
that's controversial in and of itself.
Because again, there's evidence
that they were led to believe they couldn't leave.
And that's different, that changes things entirely.
Yeah.
So you want to take another break
and then pick this part some more?
Yeah, let's do it.
Kind of fun.
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, 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, 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 Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right, the final takedown.
I'm waiting for, I'm waiting for Philips Zimbardo
to release a book about like our Jackhammer episode.
That's fine.
I would read it.
All right, so where are we here?
Basically, we're at the point where he is into the experiment
and now we're dealing with the fallout since 1971
and how this should be viewed.
One of the big things that came out of that French book,
The Birth of a Lie, is the filmmaker unearthed
a recording that was, I don't know where he found it,
but he found it and released the transcript of it
that clearly has, if not Zimbardo, at least Jaffe,
definitely Jaffe, coaching the guards.
Yeah, to be more brutal.
Right, be a tough guard.
Just think of like how the pigs do it and do it like that,
I think is what the quote was, right?
Yeah, when the whole idea of this thing
is to try and prove that without any influence,
yes, this is what happens.
Right, so there's a couple of things that happen.
Methodologically, there's a lot of things that happen
the moment they started coaching those guards.
Number one, they took any organicness out of their behavior.
They were then doing what they thought
they were expected to do, like John Wayne.
Yeah, for sure.
Who just went over the top is what it was.
And then number two, they made them co-experimenters.
The whole thing was supposed to be guards and prisoners.
And we're gonna watch.
As test subjects or participants,
and when you coach the guards, they're co-experimenters now.
Now the experiments entirely on the prisoners,
which you can say, okay, well,
then those findings still worked.
Well, that gets thrown out when you base the whole thing
on a guy who is faking, right?
But you make the guards co-experimenters
and you just completely take out any objectivity
from this experiment.
That's problem one with the methodology.
Well, and the fact we already mentioned
that one of the researchers was a warden
and, keep on calling him Zambrano.
That's fine, go ahead, Zimbardo.
Zamboni himself was the superintendent.
Like the minute he decided to do that,
I looked up, I think he was like in his late 30s
when he did this.
How did he not, like was he that bad at doing his job?
How did he not know, like, wait a minute,
this will take the experiment?
Do you wanna talk about why people think that he was so...
Yeah.
Okay, so he wasn't, I think still is,
a social activist for sure.
And he had decided, and I can't really disagree with him,
that prisons were brutal places, where brutality lived
and that they were inherently brutal.
And so if you take somebody and put them into this place,
you're doing a real disservice to humanity
by throwing somebody in a brutal place
that you know is brutal.
So his aim was to get reform to happen.
Yes, from the outset.
Well, I mean, I can't fault that,
but you can't call it a scientific experiment either.
No.
And it actually supposedly backfired as well
because one interpretation of his findings
is that it's all or nothing with prisons.
Prisons are inherently brutal or you can't have them.
So either you have prisons and you have brutal prisons
or you have no prisons.
And so faced with that choice
and with rising crime rates in the 70s,
a lot of people doubled down on getting tough
and made prisons even worse and built more prisons
and said, yes, we're not even gonna try to reform you anymore.
We're just gonna send you to these brutal places
that are inherently brutal
and there's nothing we can do about it.
So it would have backfired in that sense.
But in the idea that he was doing something
with the best interests of his fellow people at heart,
again, like you said, it's tough to fault him for that.
He just really, really gave social psychology a black eye.
Yeah, so one of the other things he did wrong,
and this one I just can't figure out either,
is he didn't have a control group.
And one of his, this guy wasn't in the experiment,
but one of his colleagues came by one day
and was like, what's your control?
What's your independent variable?
Yeah, and he was like, what?
Yeah.
He's like, I don't have one.
So if you run an experiment of any sort,
Grabster uses a great analogy
where if you're trying to figure out
what the effects of radiation are on tomatoes,
you pick a bunch of tomatoes, you weigh them,
you check them for color,
you make sure that they're identical
to another set of tomatoes.
So you have two sets of basically identical tomatoes.
One you irradiate, one you do not,
and after a set amount of time,
you go back and see what the differences are.
And then you can say probably that
when you irradiate tomatoes, these are the effects,
and the effects are the differences between the two.
Same thing with the prison experiment, right?
Yeah, what would you have here?
Two different cell blocks,
and one that literally isn't coached
and completely left alone?
That's what I would have done for sure.
And then one where you're saying,
hey, be brutal and we'll see
if everyone falls into these roles.
Exactly, that would have been great.
And actually some researchers in 2001.
Oh yeah, they did.
They did exactly that.
They basically ran the experiment
with just that control group you suggested.
It was called the BBC prison study.
Yeah, Haslam and Riker.
Yeah, and basically they did the same thing.
They did not do any coaching,
they didn't do any intervention,
they did the thing exactly like you're supposed to,
or like Zimbardo should have from the outset.
And they found that, again,
they made the control group
to the original Stanford prison experiment.
They found that the exact opposite happened.
The prisoners stayed banded together.
The guards were totally in disarray and disorganized.
The brutality never emerged,
and there wasn't any violence, from what I understand.
And this is where it gets really scummy, if you ask me.
Zimbardo found out about this,
and supposedly Haslam and Riker said they discovered
he was privately writing editors
to keep them from getting published
and claiming that they were fraudulent.
Yeah, in the journal that they released their findings,
and he wrote an appendage to their article
and said, just don't even listen to these guys.
I'm Philip Zimbardo.
Man.
So yeah, I thought that was pretty scummy too,
if he did that.
So you've got, methodologically,
there's even more problems too.
In the original newspaper advertisement, Chuck,
he said...
Prison experiment.
Prison experiment, everybody sign up.
Yeah, that was a problem in and of itself.
They shouldn't have known what they were doing.
No, exactly, until they showed up, right?
So you're gonna get a big, wide swath of people,
and then once they find out what the experiment is,
maybe they'll say no thanks or whatever.
But this was like attracting a 2007 follow-up study found.
Narcissistic, hostile, overly aggressive,
authoritarian types like flies to honey.
Yeah, or the opposite.
Well, that seems to be the case in this case.
Yeah, which was, in fact, one of them was a liberal activist
who kind of purposely went in there
because he thought maybe these findings could be used
one day for prison reform.
Well, I think also most of what I got from Jaffe
coaching the people is they like,
think about what the pigs would do and then do that,
because we really gotta show them how brutal prisons are.
I think everybody who showed up basically was against prisons.
But whether you're against prisons or forum,
you were automatically tainted
before you even showed up for the interview.
Because they wrote prison experiment in the ad.
So from the outset, there was bias.
There was no control group.
It attracted a bias cross-section of people.
Zimbardo participated.
He was a participant.
And that actually, Chuck led to the second set of findings
that Zimbardo had influenced this
and become a participant himself.
And here's the current interpretation of all of it, okay?
This seems to be the current du jour interpretation
of the Stanford Prison Experiment.
Not that people are inherently cruel
and inherently will just crumble in the face of authority,
although that might still stand.
But that people are capable of cruelty
if they're recruited by an authority figure.
The second set, and there's actually been three sets
of interpretations.
The second set was that Zimbardo inserted himself
and that it actually demonstrated
what's called situationist theory.
Yeah, and that's basically that external circumstances
are the drivers of human behavior.
Right, so the point was not that people are inherently cruel
on an individual level.
But the situation that they're put in,
they will quickly find those roles.
If there's a power structure above them
that has normalized this
and is expecting them to fulfill those roles.
And this really tied in with, you know, this is 1971.
People were still really trying to figure out
what the heck had just happened with the Nazis.
It was only like 25, 26 years before.
So this idea that this banality of evil,
this made perfect sense in that respect, right?
There is a bureaucracy that had normalized evil
and you were just following orders.
That was the second interpretation
of the Stanford Prison Experiment.
Yeah, well, and not just the Nazis,
but like the Vietnam War,
which was, I mean, this was 1971.
And like the Miley Massacre,
and you know, I was just following orders.
Like this has its fingers in a lot of
relevant politics of the day.
Right, so apparently it also tied in really well to Attica.
And Zimbardo must have just couldn't believe
his good fortune that there was a bloodiest prison riot
in American history.
Happened like a couple of weeks after he made the news
in the New York Times Magazine with this journal,
or this article that he wrote, right?
But that actually played into it too,
because apparently following orders,
a lot of guards just fired blindly
into the tear gas smoke of this prison riot
and killed tons of unarmed prisoners and hostages.
So Zimbardo was like, okay, that's fine.
However we're gonna interpret this, I'm cool with that.
The third one, I'm not quite sure
that he would be cool with, the current one.
Which is bad science.
I think, so what I saw is that
a lot of social psychologists said,
we've known this is bad science all along,
but the findings were really interesting and worthwhile.
So we didn't throw the baby out with the bathwater.
The third one is that Zimbardo inserted himself
and what this study really showed
was that people will engage in acts of cruelty
if there is a figure of authority recruiting them
to what they think is a righteous cause.
And in this case, it was Zimbardo
making the guards co-experimenters
by coaching them to be cruel.
And in the name of prison reform, ultimately,
when they showed the world what happens
when you put normal people in a prison situation.
Yeah, which is what the John Wayne guy
very much has said all his life since then
is that this is what they, I thought they wanted
was for me to be a bad guard.
So we could prove ultimately that prisons need reform.
And that is why he's still complicit
because he's still engaged in these acts
of genuine cruelty against the prisoners in the study.
And that's why he should still feel bad
and still does feel bad.
But he did it because he was recruited
in the name of this righteous cause
by somebody who was in authority.
So is this being taught this way in classes now?
I don't, I think that they, especially once it came out
that Zimbardo, and at the very least,
his warden, a co-experimenter was coaching them to do this
and that the organic cruelty is just totally out the window.
I think they don't know what to do with it right now.
They're trying to figure out like how to get these findings
across or what to make of them.
Because one of these quotes from the article you sent,
the guy said, I don't think it's scientific fraud
in the typical sense.
It was never considered to be scientific.
It's typically represented in classrooms
as a demonstration, not an experiment,
and as a notorious case of ethical malfeasance.
So that's almost a fourth takeaway,
is that it's an example of how to not do a study correctly,
which is interesting.
Oh yeah.
I mean, methodologically inserting yourself,
like lying about the findings later on
or misinterpreting the results or using spin.
Yeah, there's a lot here.
But it was approved by the Stanford Human Rights
Subjects Review Committee at the time.
Those were Zimbardo's experiments we presented this to.
And they're, you know, he still says that it was ethical.
Well, it was at the time.
Under the guidelines, it was ethical.
But then after it, they changed the guidelines.
Yeah, you couldn't do this today.
No.
Or at least not like he did it.
So I did.
You remember the very brief psychology is nuts series?
I watched that.
Going on the Stanford Prison Experiment.
Yeah, I watched that today.
Did you?
What did you think?
It was good.
Thanks, man.
Cute little background.
Yeah, I thought so too.
And let's see.
You got anything else?
No.
I mean, boy, I thought we were pretty scathing, but.
We were.
This is like vaping level scathing.
This is way worse than vaping.
I'm sure the vapors are like, oh, they were really hard
on that guy.
Yeah, the movie, you know, the documentary is probably
a little more accurate.
But the movie wasn't bad.
Yeah.
I mean, it's not great.
Yeah.
But it was OK.
It felt like a movie the week.
Gotcha.
It's an airplane movie.
Yeah, watch it on your next flight.
That's my recommendation.
Thanks, buddy.
Well, if you want to know more about the Stanford Prison
Experiment, type those words in the search bar
at HowStuffWorks.com, and it'll bring up this Grabster article.
Since I said Grabster, it's time for Listen to Mail.
I'm going to call this beautiful landscaping.
Hey, guys, I spent the last two years fixing up the yard.
In our house in Point Pleasant, Pennsylvania.
Oh, that sounds like a pleasant place.
Yeah, it is.
My husband actually introduced me to your show a few years back.
And thank God he did, because I've literally
listened to you for hours and hours while working in the yard.
Nice.
It was a huge undertaking.
I have a more flexible work schedule than he does.
So I volunteered to absorb most of the responsibility,
although he did a lot of heavy lifting too.
I enjoyed the show so much, I stopped allowing myself
to listen to it any other time.
You were only allowed during yard work.
This made me much more ready to get outside and get into it.
You guys were with me while I carried literally tons
of redstone, uphill in buckets, hauling rocks
for a firing landing, planted pecky sandra, ferns, and hostas.
In the rocky soil I've ever had to work with,
and just clearing away overgrowth.
It sounds like Tonya Harding training for the Olympics
in that one montage.
Which it turned out included a fair amount of poison ivy.
During it all, I learned about tiny, adorable little creature
called its artigrade.
The business of head transplants,
the hook worm, her favorite episode,
and some haunting information I cannot unhear,
such as you provided in the bullfighting and drowning
episodes.
You're always very entertaining, full of information.
Even when I think it's boring, you make it fun.
There were times you had me LOLing in my backyard alone
and covered in dirt and sweat like a crazy person.
Attached are some pictures of the progress,
all from your climate-controlled studio.
That is from Sharon Prashinsky, and Sharon,
you did a great job.
That is one beautiful yard you got going.
Yeah, for sure.
It is lovely.
It is.
Nice work.
We're glad we could be there with you to help you get up
that hill.
Yeah, and down the hill, and then back up the hill,
and then back down the hill.
That's right, and then back up again.
If you want to get in touch with us
to let us know how we've helped you out,
we love hearing that kind of stuff.
If you're Philip Zimbardo, we expect to hear from your lawyer.
And in the meantime, you can hang out with us at our home
on the web, stuffishano.com, where
you can find all of our social links.
And you can also send us an email to Stuff Podcast
at HowStuffWorks.com.
MUSIC
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit HowStuffWorks.com.
MUSIC
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.
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 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, 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 Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.