Stuff You Should Know - J. Edgar Hoover: Evil G-Man Pt. 2
Episode Date: May 23, 2024In the exciting conclusion of our two-part episode on Hoover, we come in at the Cold War and end on a strange note.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Guess what, Will?
What's up, Mango?
I've been trying to write a promo for our podcast, Part-Time Genius, but even though
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We also solve mysteries like how Chinese is your Chinese food, and how do dollar stores
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh.
There's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
You know us because you were just listening to part one of J. Edgar Hoover and here's
part two.
So let's go Stuff You Should Know.
First of all, I hope everyone had a nice Wednesday.
That's nice, yep.
Because I assume we're going to release these as we usually do on a Tuesday, Thursday.
Sure.
When it's a two-parter.
Yeah.
That'd be weird otherwise, right?
I hope no one did any research on that Wednesday.
Hope no one watched that Clint Eastwood movie.
No.
On that Wednesday or any day.
Yeah.
I heard it was brainless and. No. On that Wednesday or any day. Yeah.
I heard it was brainless and passionless.
What?
Is that Ebert?
Uh, no, I think it was like a IMDB reviewer.
Oh, okay.
Just a regular schmo.
Yeah, who has strong opinions.
All right, to catch everybody up,
we are talking about J. Edgar Hoover,
who headed the FBI for 48 years
through eight presidential terms
Who and I think where we left off it was?
Through World War two which we should mention. I don't think we got to this last time. This is pretty good stat. Mm-hmm
during World War two he
Managed to quadruple the size of the FBI
It grew for 4x during World War two he managed to quadruple the size of the FBI.
That's crazy. It grew four X during World War II,
which would set him up very nicely
as we teased in the last episode
to go and root out the commies.
Yeah, which was something that the average American
was totally fine with the FBI doing, like before.
Like they kind of broke their teeth on, um, like
chasing Nazis, rooting out Nazi sympathizers.
America was totally fine with that because we're
at war with the Nazis.
It made sense.
Now we're in the cold war.
This, this really kind of uneasy, weird war
chillier with the Soviets.
Yeah.
So yeah, the Soviets were our enemies.
Therefore communism was the enemy of America. So yeah, FBI Soviets were our enemies, therefore communism was the enemy of America.
So yeah, FBI, go find those guys.
Don't tell us how you're doing this, just go do it.
Yeah, I know in the last time we were,
we didn't even finish answering
because I don't think we knew for sure
the two presidents that loved him,
the two that didn't like him,
and then the four that played ball.
But I think we can throw Harry Truman
in the did not like him camp.
Yeah.
Because it seems that Truman was one of the only smart
people that was like, hey, this FBI is getting a little
out of control and there's potential for this to become
the American Gestapo here to no avail
because the power just grew and grew
despite what Truman thought.
So that is a great example of about the time where the power of the FBI and in
particular the power of J. Edgar Hoover became potent enough that it was decoupled
from the executive branch. It became its own thing. Yeah. And J. Edgar Hoover was
as powerful as presidents from about this point on.
Because as you said, Truman didn't like him or the FBI or what it could become
and it didn't amount to anything. This is where it started Chuck.
Well never mind, I was gonna make a political joke but I'm not gonna do that.
Okay.
I'm gonna be a bigger person. So we're talking the late 1940s here. There
were top secret programs being run trying to infiltrate the American Communist Party,
trying to infiltrate the spy network of the Soviet Union. One thing that will probably
do an episode on at some point is the execution of the Rosenbergs,
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg.
But that was sort of one of the end results of this program
was when he executed that married couple for espionage.
Not he, but you know, he didn't literally do it.
He certainly set it in motion.
I'm sure he would have pulled that lever
if they'd given him the opportunity.
Yeah, speculation of course.
So just like back in the day when he created the criminal records division and used that to
essentially get Hollywood on the FBI side, he went back to that playbook. But instead of just
creating movies that celebrated the FBI, he also sought to
root out any kind of subversive message that might show up in movies too.
Like you said before, he didn't like James Cagney playing a gangster, but he said,
okay, you can do it as long as you die.
Like the gangster has to die.
Right.
They took it further in the cold war where they were like, not only does the gangster have to die,
he has to basically be waving an American flag when he dies,
or he kills a communist as he's dying.
That essentially is what we need to do here in these movies from now on.
Yeah, and also set in motion actions that would lead to the eventual Hollywood blacklist had secret files
on artists.
Charlie Chaplin, Orson Welles was another and this is just from that time period.
He very famously, and we talked about the fact that he had files on John Lennon and
people like that later on in the 60s and 70s.
Loved his files.
But also little things like, hey, that movie, it's a Wonderful Life.
I don't like it, it's on a list now because it's subversive
because it demonizes big banks and, you know,
problems facing the common man.
I don't like the message of it's a Wonderful Life.
Yeah, we'll talk, I think this is gonna have to make
one of our Christmas specials
because it's been on my list for years now.
Oh yeah, that'd be good to fill that out a little bit. Yeah, but essentially it. I think this is going to have to make one of our Christmas specials, because it's been on my list for years now.
Oh yeah, that'd be good to fill that out a little bit.
Yeah.
But essentially it's, it's like you said, like
that kind of message, imagine finding it's a
wonderful life subversive.
That is how on guard they were looking for any,
not just pro communist theme, but anti-American
or anti-capitalist theme.
There were FBI agents.
I don't know if that was their job or just one of the things they did occasionally was go to the theme, but anti-American or anti-capitalist theme. There were FBI agents.
I don't know if that was their job or just one of the things they did occasionally was go to the
movies and just watch movies to see if they needed
to be investigated.
That's what the FBI, one of the things the FBI
was doing at the time.
And again, bear in mind, we know this with the
benefit of history with hindsight.
At the time, America did not know that the FBI was
going and seeing movies. I think a lot of Americans would have had a problem with that.
And as a result, the FBI had a really great reputation across the board, across the political
spectrum. Yeah. I wonder if they reported back,
like this movie is subversive
and has some third act problems.
Exactly.
They introduced the gun in the first act
and they didn't shoot it in the third act.
Another thing he had agents do was listen to music.
Long before the PMRC and Tipper Gore came along,
he had the FBI listening to R&B music that had what he deemed obscene lyrics.
And he called it race music.
And he said that, you know, when this stuff gets to the ears of white teenagers,
we're in big trouble.
So he was sticking his fingers, like you said, into every facet of American life,
including, as we'll find out right now, the
early gay rights movement.
Yeah, so the gay rights movement would have fallen into the obscenity file, which I think
you referenced in the last episode, that he had a huge, huge collection of pornography.
It wasn't just that.
There were files on the sexual activities and proclivities of everyday Americans and also American elite, like leaders
and celebrities and all that.
But the gay community was investigated
as a, because it was obscene.
They actually were, they went after them
for using the mail to send out mailers
that had no trace of sexuality associated
with them.
It was just pro-gay mailers.
Because gayness in the FBI's eyes was obscene, sending out pro-gay pamphlets in the mail
was tantamount to sending obscenity through the mail.
And so they would use like these just the slightest pretense and then in a lot of cases no pretense whatsoever to go investigate and often
infiltrate some of these movements that that that J. Edgar Hoover saw as
un-American. Yeah and as you know we talked a lot about his PR savvy some of
the things he did was after the fact he would go in and just kind of make stuff up to justify things he did.
One of which, and you know, I'll get to where I was going
here in terms of the gay rights movement,
but Ma Barker was a famous matriarch of a crime family.
And her sons did a lot of crimes.
They brought mama along, Ma Barker, to sort of distract, you know, they had this little
old lady with them to distract them and stuff.
But by all accounts, she was never actually involved in any crimes and he made up all
this stuff afterward to justify the fact that they killed her.
Yeah, the FBI killed her and her favorite son, Fred, in a shootout in Florida.
Yeah.
So, he basically said that Ma Barker led this criminal, like family criminal ring, when
in fact she was the mom, but she wasn't leading anything.
No.
Like you said, they just brought her along to deflect suspicion from the rest of the
gang, right?
People today still think Ma Barker was a criminal mastermind.
Yeah.
All because J. Edgar Hoover made that up back in the day to justify the FBI doing that.
And you were kind of using that as an example for him making stuff up after the fact that
had to do with the gay community?
Yeah, exactly.
He basically created what's now known as the Lavender, which was, hey, I'm trying to root out gay people, period,
and gay people who work within the government especially,
because they are potential security risks for the fact that
a Russian spy might have dirt on them to blackmail them,
so they could blackmail them to give up government secrets.
We need to purge the government of gay employees basically.
Irony is notwithstanding as we'll get to Hoover's sexuality in more detail later on.
Right.
So yeah, that was the lavender scare.
It was quite effective.
It's referenced indirectly in Clue, the movie.
Michael McKean's being blackmailed because he's
gay and he's a government worker.
That's a direct reference to that, that whole
unhappy period in America.
Matthew Coovers even mentioned in that movie, right?
Yeah, for sure.
He was the one who supposedly called the somebody.
I can't remember who used the phone or no,
maybe Tim Curry.
I don't remember.
And one of those groups was the Madison society.
And they were, we talked about them in our
episode on Stonewall uprising.
We talked about them in the episode about the
tr the trans uprising that came before Stonewall
in San Francisco and the tenderloin Madison
society was there.
They were the foils to those groups.
They wanted to gain respect for the gay community
by pointing out the gay community
goes to work and goes to church and feeds their dog and tips their newspaper delivery guy,
just like you. That was the Madisonian society's thing. But they also had kind of like a brutal
little sense of humor. They would frequently mail J. Edgar Hoover invitations
to their meetings because they were infiltrated anyway,
but they were also making reference to the rumors
that J. Edgar Hoover was gay,
and they were like, come join us in our meetings.
And apparently it used to drive him up the wall
whenever he got one of those.
That's pretty funny.
Yeah.
So we talked about the conundrum that is J. Edgar Hoover, despite the fact that he
was a K.A. in college and hired all these sort of, you know, legacy Confederate supporter
types.
He was not sympathetic to the Klan at all because they fell into the bucket of a vigilante
organization that would flout the bucket of a vigilante organization
that would flout the rule of law.
So he was not into that.
The FBI were the ones who uncovered
the Mississippi burning murders of 1964.
So I'm not saying like that he was just some great friend
of the black race or anything like that,
but just sort of one of those odd conundrums of his career.
Yeah, I've never seen an explanation for that
aside from he found the KKK to flout the law
that he didn't like that.
They were vigilantes and you can't have vigilantes
in J. Edgar Hoover's America.
So yeah, but they did have some successes
in investigating some
civil rights murders and crimes. Again though, this is at a time when America is
totally unaware of what the FBI's tactics are. And so because the FBI, you
know, investigated the Mississippi burning murders in 1964 and went so far
as to set up a field office in Jackson, Mississippi
All of a sudden the NAACP the ACLU they love the FBI
That's on one side on the other side are
Conservative Americans who hate the idea of any communism infiltrating into America. He's fighting
communism very publicly on one of the masterful things he did was to use Joseph McCarthy as a foil.
Joseph McCarthy was off the rails, accusing anybody and anyone of being a
communist on the flimsiest evidence.
And eventually public opinion kind of turned on him.
But J.
Gerhofer used that as like, I'm fighting
communists for real and I'm level headed above
the boards and super competent.
And it helped him raise his, his status among
communists hating and fearing Americans too.
So at this point, say the early to mid sixties,
everyone essentially considers J.
Gerhofer an American hero and the FBI as a nonpartisan
law enforcement agency that's above reproach.
That's right.
But not everybody, and we'll take a break because we're going to talk about one person
who didn't like him, and that was Martin Luther King Jr. Guess what, Mango?
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We were talking about how J. Edgar Hoover was just building his power by doing things
that would win over the hearts of Americans, left and right, black and white. And in 1956, we need to back up just a little bit
because under Eisenhower, Hoover created
something called Cointel Pro, the counterintelligence
program. We've talked about it a little bit on
different episodes. I see on my master list the
one that the guy made that where he wrote down
everything we ever mentioned doing a full
episode on. And you have Cointel Pro listed as down everything we ever mentioned doing a full episode on and
You have coin till pro listed as one that you wanted to do a full episode on yeah, it's on my ideas list still
Okay, just want to remind you it's just such a bummer sometimes
I'm like I can't bring myself to doing that one yet. So going till pro comes along
initially was fighting the Communist Party, but then expanded to
Initially was fighting the Communist Party, but then expanded to surveil and get files on the civil rights movement, civil rights leaders, black power groups, also white supremist
organizations.
But we have, you know, I mentioned that Martin Luther King Jr. was not a fan.
That is to say the least.
They were, they were enemies in a big way.
In 1957, Hoover had him surveilled,
had him wiretapped, learned of King's infidelities,
and basically like he was known to do,
was like, hey, we've got the stuff on you by the way.
Here's a little, a tidy package.
It's anonymous.
You should probably go kill yourself,
is what that package also said.
And all of this supposedly stems from a few things.
One is that apparently Martin Luther King Jr.
ignored a phone call from him one time.
No.
And that disrespect just consumed Hoover.
And King also very publicly questioned whether the FBI was like why more resources weren't
being used and put out to investigate crime against civil rights leaders.
Mississippi burning case aside, he was like,
there's no black FBI agents.
You guys are not investigating black crime
and crimes against civil rights leaders like you
should.
And so because of all of this, he was not a fan of
Martin Luther King Jr.
And here's the point where we should at least
mention that there was a rumor that has never
been proven one way or the other that J. Edgar Hoover was of mixed race.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
There was a WAPO article in 2011 where a woman came out and said, hey, my great uncle, like
when we were young, said that J. Edgar Hoover was his second cousin.
And he could prove it, but no one ever talked about it
out loud because we were all scared to,
because Hoover would have probably had us killed
or something, or we would have disappeared.
And if you look up, was J. Edgar Hoover of mixed race
or part black, you'll get just scores and scores
of articles of people that think he was,
which could help explain like he was sort of a self-hating, like the fact that he may have been
of mixed race and also gay, could help explain the fact that he went after civil rights leaders and
in the gay community as sort of a self-hating sort of thing.
Right, that certainly tracks.
But there's never been anything that's been proven.
I think some people are saying that it's absolutely not true,
but it's the kind of thing we should at least mention.
Right, for sure.
So I want to talk a little more about that package that arrived anonymously.
Supposedly the FBI made it seem as if it was written by a
disillusioned black supporter of Martin Luther King who had somehow come upon audio tapes of
his sexual escapades in hotels. Just somehow. Right. And that they sent it right after he got
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964 and his wife Coretta received the package and she opened it.
And I was looking into it a little bit. She wrote an autobiography in 2017 and she said,
still to that day, she did not believe that that was MLK on those tapes. She did not believe that
he had ever been unfaithful, that he had such a guilty conscience he would not have been able
to walk around carrying that.
Um, he would have had to have just blurted it out or something like that.
And that, that wasn't, that wasn't him, that that
was all just made up.
And I thought that was fascinating because you
hear so much about, like it's just, just put out
there as a matter of fact, that the MLK cheated on
his wife and that the FBI had audio recordings on
it never even occurred to me that the FBI had audio recordings on it, never even occurred to me that
the FBI had sent him potentially something that
wasn't him, that had framed him.
And exactly the way that people walk around today
thinking Ma Barker was a criminal mastermind,
it's entirely possible that we all walk around
thinking MLK used to go to sex orgies because the
FBI made that up.
That was totally within the realm of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI's tactics.
Yeah, that's a good point.
It really makes you question some of the stuff that we know about things for sure.
Because that was exactly the kind of thing they did.
They used underhanded tactics in Cointel Pro where they would try to break up marriages.
Like you said, they would try to
drive people to suicide.
Um, for organizations, they would send in
people who would essentially put, they would,
they would identify who is maybe the, the
second in command and try to get them to turn
on the first in command and just create turmoil.
They did it, um, everywhere, including the
Black Panthers, as we talked about extensively in
the Black Panther episode.
That's just what they did.
And I also saw that one of the things they would do is send them to meetings to just
ask all sorts of dumb, mundane questions to drag the meeting out and make it so boring
that people wouldn't come back again.
Yeah.
Oh yeah, he had moles all over the place using all sorts of disruptive tactics.
Yeah, pretty crazy.
It's really interesting.
Yeah.
So we talked a lot sort of about the presidents that were using him, tolerating him, and working
with him in different capacities.
Nixon, like you said, loved the guy because Nixon was a crook and was game for any kind
of ill-gotten gains that he could get through Hoover. They were kindred spirits. Nixon was a crook and was game for any kind of
ill-gotten gains that he could get through Hoover. They were kindred spirits.
Yeah, he was like, this is all just great.
This is fine, I love you.
He did consider firing him at one point, like many have.
And again, we kind of went over that in the first episode.
Most of them had their reasons,
whether or not they had dirt against them.
Or I did find some historians that say that Hoover may have had dirt on these people,
he may not have. It could have been a career-long bluff, but he had such power
and worked in such secrecy that nobody knew what he had on anyone.
So it wasn't worth going up against him
to like test that and find out.
Yeah, I saw elsewhere also,
all of this probably came from Beverly Gates.
She did such a great investigation of him as a person
and the impacts he had.
One of the explanations I saw is that some presidents
and other elected officials
were just plain scared of the guy. He just had so much power and was so willing to use it in just the worst ways to personally
ruin your life if you wanted to. That to be so bold as to go on his, get on his bad side.
Some people are just like, it's, I don't have the metal for that kind of thing.
And then another explanation I saw was that
all those presidents who couldn't resist the temptation
of using the black arts that he was a master of,
that automatically was dirt that he had on them.
Right, yeah, that's a good point.
Like, he'd be like, okay, you can get rid of me,
but I'm taking you down with me,
so you probably should just leave me on the job.
Yeah, this quote from LBJ was pretty great, and it kind of sums it up was,
I would rather have him inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing in.
So like, it's better to keep an eye on this guy than fire him and see what happens next.
Exactly. And again, this was like, so there was a big,
you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours,
going on with all eight of the presidents
that he served under.
And again, it did not matter what political leanings
or stripes they had, what ideology they came from.
He would find a way to work with them
and get them to work for him.
Yeah, we mentioned early on in the first episode
I believe that the Kennedys were not fans,
nor he of them.
He specifically oversaw the investigation into the JFK assassination, was later criticized
for not looking more into the conspiracy, the various conspiracies, but certainly that
the American government could have somehow been involved.
He didn't really didn't like Bobby Kennedy.
Bobby was young. He was 35 years old. He was seen by Hoover and others as underqualified and
he would you know, he would go to work and take off his tie and his jacket and just work in his in his
unbuttoned suit shirt with the sleeves rolled up and
jacket and just work in his unbuttoned suit shirt with his sleeves rolled up.
And Hoover did not like that kind of thing at all
when he wanted appearances to be very tidy
and very old fashioned.
Just really interesting stuff.
I think it was
LBJ that gave him an indefinite exemption
from mandatory government retirement at age 70, which was the law at the time.
And this was in 1964, just a few days before Hoover was to testify for the Warren Commission.
And he, you know, he stayed on that job until he died.
When I was a one-year-old baby, won in change May 2nd, 1972 at the age of 77.
He died from a heart attack.
Yeah.
That's, that's how we quit.
Yeah.
And died, died popular.
Yeah.
That's the thing.
Like you, you said one of the reasons, like probably some presidents didn't
want to take him on was just out of his popularity.
some presidents didn't want to take him on, it was just out of his popularity.
He was just looked up to by a huge swath of
American society for essentially the whole time he was on the job.
So much so that he could also alter public opinion about things.
Like you explained how he was not a fan of Martin Luther King.
He came out and called Martin Luther King America's quote,
most notorious liar.
At a time when the same year that MLK was given the Nobel Peace Prize, where he was at his
peak of popularity, or he was ascending to the peak of popularity and reverence, right?
Like, J. Edgar Hoover comes out, he's like, I don't like him, he's a liar. And a lot of America was
like, yeah, totally, he's a liar, we agree with you. He could just out, he's like, I don't like him, he's a liar. And a lot of America was like, yeah, totally,
he's a liar, we agree with you.
He could just kind of sway things like that too.
He also had the willingness to do stuff like that
if he thought it would serve him well,
or if he hated somebody so much
that he would publicly denounce them
because they didn't return his call.
Right.
You know, when I read that story, I was like, no way.
But then the more I learned about the guy, it's like, it seems like that could have been
a thing.
He thought so much of himself that being ignored by a prominent civil rights leader was like,
all right, you're on the list.
Amazing.
So you talked about how Bobby Kennedy and he did not like each other. Apparently the machinations of the social lives
of elected officials was so loosey goosey.
I'm sure still is, but was so loosey goosey
during the Kennedy administration that
Bobby would borrow the Los Angeles field office
director's car to go visit Marilyn Monroe when
he was having an affair with her. That'd be the head of the FBI in Los Angeles.
No, Bobby, they both were having an
affair with Marilyn Monroe.
Oh, did they?
I don't think I knew that.
And supposedly he had borrowed the field office,
uh, director's car and went to go visit Marilyn
the day that she died.
And that some people trace her suicide to having
just been broken up with by Bobby Kennedy, who was again
using the field office of Los Angeles director's car to go do that.
Well, despite all this, like we said, he remained popular. In 1971, there was a Gallup poll that found 74%,
74%, it's a pretty high number, of Americans
thought he was doing an excellent or good job.
And then only 7% thought he was doing a poor or bad job.
I imagine in 1971, you know, kind of through the 60s,
that 7% were sort of the most hardcore, you know, left-wing hippies that were around at the time.
They're still mad about the Rosenbergs probably.
Yeah, I mean, they seem like the only people
in America that didn't like the guy.
Yeah, so yes, the thing is, is he wasn't immune
to changes in public opinion and shifts in public opinion.
There was a point where Nixon got frustrated
with them and actually this is about the time
where he was thinking of firing him because
Jagger Hoover essentially said, no, I can't do
any more of your dirty tricks.
The public's mad at me because they're learning
about stuff that I've done and said, like, for
example, he told the, the white house that the
Kent state protesters that were killed by the
national guard invited and got what they deserved. And he just became more and more of a loose cannon. the White House that the Kent State protesters that were killed by the National Guard invited
and got what they deserved.
And he just became more and more of a loose cannon
the older he got.
Apparently he would take hours long naps
in his office during the day.
He just wasn't somebody, he was too powerful
to be that loose of a cannon, but he also, he was sensitive to how people viewed him.
He was a perfectionist, so he wanted everybody
to think he was perfect.
So when public opinion would kind of like ebb and flow,
he would say like, Nixon, no, I can't help you out.
So Nixon turned to his own dirty tricks group
and used former FBI agents to carry out his tricks
when J. Edgar Hoover wouldn't have the FBI directly
do it anymore.
Yeah, and I think that happened on the heels of, in 1971, there was a group that broke
in to a field office, an FBI field office in Pennsylvania, and stole some Cointel Pro
documents, some top secret documents that were released to some
to the media and some to members of Congress that didn't even know this stuff.
And this was during the Nixon administration and it was very embarrassing, but also just
really screwed up what Nixon was up to.
So it was a big public thing.
I think Hoover sort of backed off on, it was such a big deal, like what was released,
that he backed down from really pursuing
whoever leaked to those Pentagon papers.
Right.
And that just wouldn't do for Nixon,
so that's why, like you said,
he turned to dudes like Gordon Liddy.
Yeah.
So I said we'd take a break,
and then we'd come back and talk about the tide turning
and just public opinion about Hoover and his personal life after the break. What do you
think?
Let's do it. Guess what, Mango?
What's that, Will?
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Okay, so almost immediately after Hoover's death, stuff starts coming out.
That Cohen-Telpro break-in in Pennsylvania was a huge turning point.
That happened in 1971.
He died in 1972.
I think by 1975, the Senate was undertaking investigations into some of these abuses that had been revealed by the Cointel Pro papers.
And as more and more stuff came out, J. Edgar Hoover's image completely turned and was tarnished.
And it became what we think of him today, starting around the mid-70s.
Before that, again, American hero. After that, I mean, sure, there are a lot of people
with crew cuts and pocket protectors
who were still totally fine with all the tactics had done,
but most Americans started to change their opinion
of him starting around then.
Yeah, absolutely.
This is also when the government was like,
hey, that guy that was, that headed the FBI for 48 years,
maybe that's not such a good idea to have, give someone that much power.
So in 1976, Congress set a 10-year term limit for the director of the FBI.
And the Justice Department got together and was like, we need good, some new guidelines here that really
separate things out. So the FBI isn't just like the police wing of the White House Oval Office.
Yeah. Like the new thing is like if the president says hi to you in the hall,
you can't even say hi back. You just have to walk past him.
Yeah.
So I thought that would get a chuckle.
Oh, there we go.
Um, no, it was, it was good, but also semi believable.
So, uh, yeah.
So we have this terrible image of J.
Edgar Hoover, um, these days, but there's another, another kind of facet
to it that isn't necessarily terrible.
It's more just fascinating.
And that is, you know, a question, was J. Edgar Hoover gay?
And aside from, say, like, photo documentary evidence, it's essentially everything else
you could possibly need to say, like, yes, this guy was gay, he was gay.
Because he wasn't even hiding it in a lot of ways.
He was living out in plain sight,
which again kind of goes to underscore how powerful he was.
He was essentially living in a gay marriage
with another man and all the people around him knew it
and no one was comfortable talking about it.
Yeah, so this was Clyde Tolson portrayed by Armie Hammer
in the Clint Eastwood
movie and although I didn't see the movie I did read a lot about it today
and the movie is that's a big part of the movie is like making no qualms about
the fact that they were essentially married to one another. Right. Hoover
backing up just a little bit he lived with his mom in the home that he grew up in until she died in 1938.
He was a 43-year-old man. Nothing wrong with that, necessarily. Just pointing that out. He never married, obviously.
He had a very forward-facing public relationship with Dorothy Lamour, the actor.
Some people, and this is again with sort of the different biographers' takes, I saw one
biographer say, oh, they were, he is not gay.
He was absolutely in love with Dorothy Lamour.
That was the love of his life.
You said that.
It was one of the biographers.
And he said it was absolutely true because Dorothy L'Amour never
denied that that was the case. Other people say, no, no, come on, she was a beard and that was a
fake romance created for PR. He always said he couldn't find an old-fashioned girl, but it was,
like you said, it was well-known, sort of like a lot of stuff when you work in politics.
I remember when my friend worked on Capitol Hill,
like 30 something years ago,
and he would talk about George Bush Senior's affair
and mistress, and he was like,
yeah, everyone knows that that's going on.
And I was like, how does this stuff not get out? And he was like, it's Capitol Hill. that's going on. And I was like, how does this stuff not get out?
And he was like, it's Capitol Hill.
He's like, there are a lot of just secrets
within this city, within this very small area
that are just sort of out in the open secrets
that somehow just don't get talked about
in the mainstream press.
This was back then.
I think it's probably a little bit different now.
But apparently everybody in Washington knew
and I guess sort of quasi accepted the fact
that Clyde Tolson and J. Edgar Hoover were in love.
Let's talk about how the evidence that people knew
and accepted the fact, shall we?
Sure.
Every morning, J. Edgar Hoover in the Bureau limousine
would go pick up Clyde Tolson on the way to work every morning.
Every day they would go eat lunch together at Harvey's.
Can I say something real quick?
Yeah.
I did see one historian say something kind of funny when he was talking about the fact that they
came and left together for work. He said, this is a time when carpooling was not in fashion.
Right. It was probably considered communist.
Maybe so. this is a time when carpooling was not in fashion. Right, it was probably considered communist.
Maybe so.
So that's, you know, all very circumstantial.
Then you get- So lunch together, you said.
They had lunch every single day together at Harvey's.
On the house, I read, or saw somewhere.
And then they would vacation together.
Yeah.
Apparently they would go to Miami during the winter.
They would spend a month every year in La Jolla
with Pat and Richard Nixon.
A couple's vacation, right?
There's plenty of photographs of them hanging
out on the beach together.
And then the one that gets me, the one where
it's like, okay, this group of people is totally
aware of this and totally accepting of it.
I know where you're going.
They would send joint invitations to them to parties.
Yeah.
Like you did not just send J. Edgar Hoover an invitation to a social event.
You sent J. Edgar Hoover and Clyde Tolson an invitation to the social event,
or else you were on Hoover's S-list.
Yeah. And they sent joint thank you notes for stuff.
Like a couple.
They were a couple.
The only thing I'll say is that you and I get joint
invitations for weddings and stuff.
Uh, okay.
Yeah, sure.
But we're a couple of sorts.
We've never been to Miami together.
No, nor have we spent a month in La Jolla.
That's on my list though. We spent a weekend in La Jolla, I think, for Comic-Con.
We spent a week in Guatemala together.
That's true.
So we're comparing apples to oranges here, I think.
Yeah, and we're just kidding around, of course.
But there was a, who knows how many real letters,
because his personal longtime secretary Helen Gandy,
portrayed by Naomi Watts in the movie, like we said, shredded and burned all of his personal files.
A lot of it was apparently boring stuff like IRS stuff and pet vet records and just boring day-to-day things,
but among that stuff was all of his personal correspondence
and letters and who knows what was in those letters
because we do know of one love letter
that existed to Tolson from 1943.
Yeah, I don't remember the exact quote,
but essentially what he was saying is like,
there's no words can describe how much love I have in my heart for
you and, um, like it's a love letter.
It's a love letter.
It certainly isn't appropriate for a boss to
his right-hand man.
Cause I don't know if we spelled this out.
This was his right-hand man.
This guy was his number two at the FBI.
Essentially the entire time he was at the FBI.
So even accepting the idea, essentially the entire time he was at the FBI.
So even accepting the idea that maybe they were a gay married couple, essentially, at
the very least all of this stuff is not appropriate for a boss and his underling, at the very
least.
Yeah.
He also left Tulsa and his entire state, about 550 grand back then, a little more than
four million today. The flag draped on his casket at his funeral was given to Tulsa.
Tulsa was buried with him. When he died, there were all kinds of rumors and things and columns written about this sort of things mocking him at the time.
Um, Tolson said on his FBI application that he handed Hoover
that he was, quote, not interested in women.
Uh, and then Hoover also had a collection of photos
of Tolson, uh, asleep in bed.
Um, and, you know, they weren't like necessarily
naked or anything, but just a large collection of photos of him sleeping in bed.
I saw them described as tender photos.
Sure.
So, yeah, that was, that's, there's a lot of evidence that they had a marriage, a long, like decades long marriage out in the open. And one of the things that stands out to me is that
everybody in their society, in their group, in
Washington society, accepted it at least to some
degree or another, and other people clearly
didn't care at all.
And this is at a time where like you could, you
could fire employees for being gay because you
were worried they were going to get blackmailed.
I think it's just fascinating that, that
duality where politicians or other people have to be like,
yeah, I know, being gay is terrible,
middle America, isn't it the worst?
Where personally, they're like,
there's nothing wrong with gay people,
I have nothing wrong with gay people.
They just, it just got dragged out
because so many people did have a problem with it.
And ironically, it wasn't the people calling the shots,
it was the people who, I guess wasn't the people calling the shots, it was the people who, I guess,
elect the people calling the shots.
Yeah, absolutely.
When Hoover died, Nixon named Tolson
the acting director of the FBI,
he held that position for one day,
and then retired, was not in great health himself.
And another little fun fact,
that's stuff you should know
related is that Tolson was part of the FBI team
that nabbed the Nazis that invaded Florida.
Awesome.
Yeah.
Great job, Tolson.
What else you got?
Well, I mean, if this is the end,
we promised at the beginning just a little arm chair diagnoses
of his mental fitness. This is not something that people should do properly. It's frowned upon to
just sort of diagnose someone after their death. But it was a time where he, a lot of this stuff
people weren't seeking help for, given his family history with his father's depression
and mental illness that ended his life. A lot of legitimate clinicians have said that
they fully believe that J. Edgar Hoover, at the very least, had a narcissistic personality
disorder with paranoia attached, and that could very well explain
sort of how he went about his career.
Yeah, I saw at the very least he was a perfectionist.
That can be very driving.
Sure, is that a disorder?
It's not a disorder but it certainly can make you
make some strange decisions and go in strange directions
that other people might not.
Good thing I'm not a perfectionist.
I know. So what else you I'm not a perfectionist. I know.
So, um, what else you got?
I got nothing else.
All right.
So Chuck, uh, we, I mean, there's so much stuff that has been left, like uncovered,
unsaid, unread, unresearched.
So if anybody out there has some great stories about J. Edgar Hoover that we didn't touch
on, we'd love to hear them.
Uh, and in the meantime, while you're generating those emails,
it's time for listener mail.
All right, explanation of gears for Josh.
Hey guys, here's a possible way to explain gears,
speed changes and gear ratios.
Okay, let's have it.
That may help with your comprehension,
even if you don't understand the mechanical concept. That is, driven divided by drive. For example, your input gear, which is the
one being driven by the windmill rotor, for instance, has 500 teeth. The gear on
the generator itself only has 50 teeth. So it's about 1 tenth the size. You divide 500 by 50, you equal 10,
so that will give you a 10 times increase in speed. So for every one turn of that windmill
rotor the generator turns 10 times. And if you want to slow things down just put the
gears in the opposite place. 50 teeth on the input gear, 500 teeth on the output, 50 divided by 500 is 0.1. So
that is a ratio of 1 to 10. So for every 10 turns of the windmill blade the
generator turns once. Okay I think the difference, I think I actually have this
now. I think in addition to it being explained really well,
I had my eyes closed and was visualizing it
while you were reading it.
So I think that was the big breakthrough.
All right, so that is from Mike Lewis.
Mike!
Just want to shout out Mike's company.
He's the owner of Iron Doctors.
If you are in Colorado Springs,
and really they said they go anywhere in Colorado,
and he didn't ask he in fact said please you don't have to plug my business it was
just a work email but I like to because Iron Doctors service industrial
machinery and construction vehicles anywhere in Colorado. Well thanks a lot
Mike I appreciate it I truly understand gears now. Way to go. And if you want to be like Mike, then you can send us an email to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app,
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Guess what, Will?
What's that, Mango?
I've been trying to write a promo for our podcast, Part-Time Genius, but even though we've done over 250 episodes, we don't really talk about murders or cults.
I mean, we did just cover the Illuminati of cheese, so I feel like that makes us pretty edgy.
We also solve mysteries like how Chinese is your Chinese food
and how do dollar stores make money?
And then, of course, can you game a dog show?
So what you're saying is everyone should be listening.
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Last season, millions tuned into the Betrayal podcast
to hear a shocking story of deception.
I'm Andrea Gunning, and now we're sharing
an all-new story of Betrayal.
Justin Rutherford.
Doctor, father, family man.
It was the perfect cover to hide behind.
Detective Weaver said, I'm sure you know why we're here.
I was like, what in the world is going on?
Listen to Betrayal on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
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A new season of Bridgerton is here.
And with it, a new season of Bridgerton, the official
podcast.
I'm your host, Gaby Collins.
And this season, we are bringing fans even
deeper into the ton. Watch season three of the Shondaland series on Netflix. Then fall
in love all over again by listening to Bridgerton the Official Podcast on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to catch a new episode every Thursday.