Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Dr. Seuss: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Episode Date: January 6, 2024The Seuss is loose in this episode about legendary children's book author Ted Geisel. The funny thing is, he didn't ever want children of his own, and his past work was a bit problematic. Explore his ...entire legacy in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi everybody, I hope you're having a great weekend.
Chuck Bryant here, co-host of the Stuff You Should Know Podcast, of what you are listening to.
This selects episode comes from December 2018, and it's all about old Dr. Seuss.
Theodore Geisel, Dr. Seuss Cohen The Adore Guisle, Dr. Seuss Colin,
the good, the bad, and the ugly,
because if you talk about Dr. Seuss,
you gotta talk about it all.
The books, the great stuff,
and some of them not so great stuff.
So check it out now if you'd like,
Dr. Seuss Colin, the good, the bad, and the ugly.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of I Heart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant. There's Jerry over there. And this is the Dr. Soys cast. Our final episode of this year. 2018. So long in the books. Dr.
Soys. Dr. Soys, that's right. You know, it's funny. Well, I will get to that.
All right. Everything that's funny can wait. Yep. We're in a talk serious.
Dr. Seuss was an author of Children's Books.
He was so great.
And also kind of racist.
Chuck, there's a lot of stuff in here.
I wish I didn't know.
I know. I think we're about to ruin Dr. Seuss
at the end of the year, right after the holidays.
Right.
Yeah. But, well, let's just talk about the man.
Okay.
So, we are talking, we keep saying Dr. Soice, everybody knows him as Dr. Soos, but apparently
the correct pronunciation is Soice.
Yeah.
And the guy would know because Soice is actually his middle name.
His name is Theodore Soice Geisel or Geisel. Is it Geisel or Geisel?
It would be Geisel in German.
You go with the second vowel.
So Theodore Soys Geisel.
Yeah. And it's sort of when I saw that everyone basically was like
Zeus until he eventually was like fine. Like I can't fight this fight
in longer. Well, they're like, we'll spell it differently then.
But they're reminding me of Joe Thiesman, the very famous story of quarterback Joe Thiesman
who changed his spelling or his pronunciation to Thiesman to rhyme with Heisman, which I think
is the story.
I think it's true.
No.
No, I think that's true.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
What do you think that was just like an old football tale?
No, I'd never heard. I thought you were just being funny. Oh, no. That really happened and that really came back to vitamin the
Rump when his thigh bone broke open
He's like, I guess my knee would have busted if he had just kept at these men. Oh
Is that not okay?
So we're obviously once we get into Joe Thiesman,
leg breaking talk, we're talking about Dr. Sears.
That's right.
Like I said, theodore Soys Geisel,
who is, I can't really think of a children's book author
that is more widely known.
Maybe Charles Schultz.
Maybe, I think the kind of,
where is the comic strip guy.
Children's book.
Children's book. Yeah. Like Judy Bloom,
sure, but I don't know if I call it
Children's book. Young adult,
who knows why? Like children's book,
I guess the barren's saying bears,
not the barren's steen bears.
Yeah, I would say that
Teddy Geisel holds that distinction for sure.
At the very least his work, his drawing is just immediately recognizable as style.
Yeah, I mean, that font.
We use that font for our live Christmas show shirts.
I'd say on the op-be-right key.
No, it's not his.
In fact, I looked it up.
I was kind of curious.
I was like, what is that great font that he uses for his book titles?
And I don't know what he used.
He probably just hand drew it.
I imagine.
But now there are fonts called, soys, doctors, SOOS font, or grinched that you can, you know,
you can gank that.
Sure.
Like we did for our Christmas shirts.
I haven't heard that word in forever.
Gank?
I think I was wearing like huge gencos last time.
I heard the word gank.
Gank my milk off my tray.
Right.
Yeah, I'm bringing it back.
I think that's the last time I used it too.
So should we go back to the beginning?
Yes.
Back to Springfield, Massachusetts in 1904.
That's right. March 2, as a matter of fact, fellow Pisces, Dr. Sois was born, Teddy Geisel,
and his grandpa's had come from Germany in the mid-1800s, bought a brewery because they
were good Germans. They knew all about beer.
And originally get this.
The name of the brewery was Combach and Geisel and they locally called it Comeback and
Guzzle.
I love that.
And that awesome.
In German, no less.
Yeah.
Whatever that would be.
I think it'd be Combach and Guzzle.
So we moved here and it would end up becoming the Springfield Brewery's company, which
is father then ran.
And this is really like we did even did a show on prohibition.
And it never really hit home to me some of the repercussions of that.
I was just like, people can't drink.
But I never thought about a family business just being shut down.
That was a good episode.
It was.
But that's what happened. That prohibition came along.
They had this successful brewery in their family.
And they're like, sorry,
you're no longer in business.
Go find another job.
These guys, who were secretly drinking.
Right.
Yeah.
So the job that his father did get
was eventually became the supervisor of the town's parks.
Yeah, kind of cool. And there's a myth, an incorrect myth from what I understand.
One of the parks had a zoo in it. And so a lot of people say that drawings of the animals were
some of the first at the zoo were some of the first drawings that little Ted came up with.
Not true. Now his father became super intent in the parks when he was already a grown man.
Oh, but did he?
Well, not a grown man.
He was definitely not a little kid at the zoo.
Did he go to the zoo and draw animals or is that all false?
I think it may be all false, but I'm making that part up.
I just, from what I read, he was grown enough that he wasn't a little boy drawing pictures
of animals at the zoo, like people think.
Interesting. Interesting.
Yeah.
I thought it was as well.
I love busting myths.
I mean, I've wear a beret for now.
You should do a show.
Uh, so Woolworth one comes along, which I've been, I've been doing a lot of
Woolworth one reading lately with the, really?
The anniversary of the armistice.
Armistice?
Yeah, you got it.
Uh, really interesting.
I didn't know much about it. It's a pretty serious war. Oh, man got it. Really interesting. I didn't know much about it.
It's a pretty serious war.
Oh, man, brutal.
Everything I know about is from the Wonder Woman movie.
Yeah.
I can.
So they were German, the guys those were, like we said.
And so in the United States during World War I,
there was a lot of anti, in fact, for a long time, actually.
There was a lot of anti-German sentiment in the US. Right. They're like, we're not German. We just there was a lot of anti, in fact, for a long time, actually, there was a lot
of anti-Derman sentiment in the U.S. They're like, we're not German, we just like beer a lot.
And our name is Geissel. So everyone, it was clear that they were German. And so,
you know, there was, I get the feeling that he, you know, felt like he felt like he was picked on and laughed at, teased because he
was German.
Right.
So if you can't beat him, join him, turn that same kind of big a tree on to others, we'll
find.
Right.
So he starts at a very early age in high school drawing cartoons, writing essays, funny
essays, satirical essays.
And he started using a pen named very early on, maybe because
he was German. And he just reversed his last name and he became the theo Leseeg.
Yeah, actually, I'm one of my favorite books, Hooper Humberding, not him, is written by Theo Leseeg.
Oh, really? Yeah. Interesting. So that was his first book. I always thought this was a Dr.
Suss book and then I saw this and I'm like it was a Dr. Suze book.
Wow.
All right.
Do you ever read that one?
I don't think so. What's it called?
Hooper Humbert Inc. Not him. It's about this kid who's throwing a birthday party and
everybody's invited to the greatest birthday party you've ever seen in your life, except
for poor Humberhumbert Inc. And I think you get some bite of finally at the end.
Where your parents like, we should probably get Josh this
and go ahead and get him ready.
Pretty much.
There actually was a birthday party I wasn't invited to
and I was like, I'm Hooper Humbertink.
Oh, well, you know, my deal was I wasn't allowed
to go to boy girl parties for a while.
So.
But you were still invited, right?
Yeah, but that was even worse
because I was invited and I was like,
I had to say no, I can't go because there's girls there
Right, I got you. I mean how humiliating is that especially in college? Yeah, and they're like
What's wrong with girls? I'm like, I don't know as my parents. He seemed great to me. They not told me they smell nice
All right, so he reversed his name became Liseg
went to Dartmouth College, and like many, many famous
humorists, I guess you could call him.
Yeah, for sure.
He wrote for the, his College Humor magazine, it was called the Jackal lantern.
Obviously.
And it was just like, really solidifies that College Humor magazine has really produced some of the
brightest comedic minds that in this country over the years, you know.
Yeah.
Letterman, I think he worked at National Lampoon, Sydney.
I don't know if it was a positive idea.
Conan certainly did, the Harvard Lampoon.
I'm pretty sure Letterman did as well.
At the very least, a lot of his writers did.
Sure.
Okay.
Fine.
Okay. We'll settle on that, that version of the truth.
But he got kicked off of the magazine staff
when he was caught drinking on campus during prohibition,
which is kind of awesome.
Yeah, I'll bet it wasn't for him.
What do you mean?
Oh, but he was like, well, I wanna be on the magazine staff.
This is terrible, this is an unjust deal.
Oh, yeah.
Not awesome for him.
Right.
Yeah, yeah.
I thought you meant he wasn't doing the drink in or something.
Right.
This did nothing to cut his career off, though.
No, no, no.
He just adopted a new pseudonym.
Yeah.
Soice.
Right.
S-E-U-S-S, again, but he pronounced it soice.
Right.
But he was the only person who did.
So he did graduate from Dartmouth and I think
1926, which also further goes to show that he was, so if he graduated college in 1926,
that his father's brewery wouldn't have been shut down until, I don't remember when
prohibition started, but he was obviously not a young kid necessarily.
Gotcha. Okay.
Drawing dumb animals.
At the zoo.
At the zoo.
But he went on to Oxford to, I guess, pursue a higher degree.
Yeah.
I think he was going to be a teacher was his original intent.
Mm-hmm.
And he didn't like Oxford, but Oxford brought him to his wife, Helen Palmer.
Yes, first wife it's first wife.
It's first wife.
And they met and she actually had a really great influence on him by saying,
I think you are maybe going to be a better artist than a teacher and kind of pushed him
toward that.
Yeah.
And he ended up pursuing a career in art largely because of her influence.
Yeah, and he sort of did the student thing.
He worked on the novel and he traveled around Europe and was sort of doing...
And he was with Helen, of course, this whole time.
They eventually get married.
And then he went to work for a magazine called Judge,
drawing once again, like political cartoons, humor cartoons.
This is where he added the doctor to his name, sort of a joke, because he, I guess,
did not get that doctorate degree or whatever he was pursuing.
No, he didn't, but later on in life, Dartmouth did bestow an honorary degree to make him
an official doctorate. When are we going to get one of those? I've been waiting a long time, Chuck.
And are they as worthless as I think they are? Totally.
Yeah, I mean, sure, you'll get like the discounted Wendy's
that they offer, but that's really the only perk.
Because I'm saying like, I'm a doctor.
Can you really call yourself that though?
Sure.
Like only chumps do that, right?
Like you have to call me doctor now.
Dude, you will see me telling people
to call me doctor Clark.
Okay. I'll just, I'll be more personable people to call me Dr. Clark.
Okay.
I'll be more personable.
I'll be Dr. Josh, like a chiropractor.
I could see you going off and getting your PhD one day.
Nah.
Nah.
I want the honor.
You want the honor.
From Bowling Green State University in Ohio.
The backdoor version.
Pretty much.
Yeah.
I like the preversion.
All right, so he got the doctor on the name, became Dr. Pretty much. Yeah. I like the free version. All right, so he got the doctor on the name became Dr.
Sois and from then on he he never wrote under his given name
again. He was always Dr. Sois from that point. Right.
Should we take a break? You can see me getting a PhD. Yeah.
This late in my career. Yeah. This mid in my career. Sure.
Am I like Natalie Portman or something?
Yes.
All right, let's take a break.
Stuff is should go.
What up, y'all. This is Prop.
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You remember Joe from church, his mom in the prayer group
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So I took the chicken out, like you said,
I remember I took the chicken because you said,
take the chicken out.
Do you remember I got an A on that map test?
You remember I got that A?
So I was gonna take that out and then work on you,
filibuster.
You're just trying to stop her from making an immediate
decision, that's all filibuster in it. And the Congress do it all the time. So you know what I'm saying?
Hey, you already noticed stuff. So we take these seemingly complex, high ideas and break them down
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All right Natalie.
Nat. I wish, right? I bet Natalie Portman hates being called Nat.
You think?
She seems like the type of Natalie who would hate being called Nat.
Let's find out.
Dr. Portman.
Natalie Portman, will you please get in touch with us and let us know whether you're cool
with being called Nat or not?
Well, hey, since we're on that big shout out to Mr. Mark Ruffalo.
Who's basically the male Natalie Portman.
Yeah, he tweeted out our Navajo code talkers episode,
which means that he's aware of this podcast
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So if you're listening, man, thanks.
Yeah, thanks a lot.
That means a lot.
Not just aware, he liked it.
He encouraged people to listen to it.
He wasn't like steer clear of this piece of poop.
Right. This is a good podcast is what he was saying.
Man, I remember when I saw you can count on me for the first time.
Oh my God.
That movie wrecked me.
It was such a good movie.
Yeah.
Not just the first time.
Like just every time you watch that movie, it's wonderful.
It's really great.
So I have another show called Movie Crush, Mr. Ruffalo.
We'd love to have you on.
We'll just leave it there.
All right. So, all right, here's what happens.
Teddy Geisel starts doing ads.
Yeah, and does quite well.
Yeah, I mean, if you're an ad illustrator,
you basically do it, you're told, the client says this is what we want.
He was the kind of artist who, because of his distinctive style,
his style is what the clients wanted. Right. So as an ad illustrator, he became nationally famous.
Yeah, which is crazy to think of now. It really is. His first big break was for something
called Flit. It was a bug spray. And if you look at the flit ads, they have a picture of the flit.
And it was that old, timey, Tom and Jerry pump,
and it's like, couldn't be more poisonous.
Yeah, it was like a cloud of noxious smoke.
So that formed like a skull and crossbones
in the air, basically, right?
That's what he was drawing stuff for,
and he came up with a catch phrase,
because he wasn't just illustrating,
he was also copywriting in these ads,
and he came up with quick Henry, the flit, and that just became a a catch phrase, because he wasn't just illustrating, he was also copywriting in these ads, and he came up with quick Henry, the flip,
and that just became a national catch phrase.
Yeah, like where's the beef?
Right, like somebody's pestering you,
you're just like to somebody else,
quick Henry, the flip.
That's how I probably would've used it.
But so he became known for that,
and then a second egg campaign made him even bigger.
Oh, right, so he did flip for 17 years dude. Right. Which is like I thought me
Yeah, sure he did that for a couple of years. Right. I mean there's almost two decades of doing those ads
Made a lot of money. I kept them, you know
nice and
Employed through the through the Great Depression and then this one's even weirder
He went to work for Standard Oil,
who had SO oil and SO gas.
And this was SO marine, which was their boat oil.
Yeah, in 1934, he has this PR idea to create a fake Navy.
The Suce Navy.
The Suce Navy.
Which is nothing. He just made it up out of nowhere to
promote the SO marine oil. Yeah, and it worked. Yeah, because he basically drafted people into his navy.
He would draw like famous figures, like say Eleanor Roosevelt or something like that, dressed up in
the suce, the suce navy uniform or whatever. And it became a thing like people wanted to be in it.
So they would apply to be in it. And I guess S.O. would hold a party every year
and just pull out all the stops.
And there would be this lavish,
Sous Navy party.
You know what it was called?
The Sous Navy, Luncheon and Froulic.
That sounds so like 30s.
They had 2,000 admirals and they included among them,
Vincent Astor and Guy Lombardo, famous band leader.
And as this is a grab star article, as Ed put it, they were what you would call like
tastemakers today, like wealthy influential Americans wanted to be in this fake Navy to go to this
luncheon and frolic. Right. And he wrote these little Navy story booklets and it astonishingly it was a big deal and
it actually worked.
And when you look at them there, they look like Dr. Seuss books.
Like, it's not like he changed his style.
No, no, that's the thing.
Like he became famous for famous and sought after for his style.
Yeah, exactly.
And weirdly enough, he said that the only reason he went into children's books initially
was because his standard oil contract didn't forbid it.
Huh, like that was some of the work that he was allowed to do on the side.
Oh, gotcha.
He never, he was like, it's not like I had a great thing for kids.
Well, he even said very famously multiple times that he didn't write for kids. He wrote for people.
And he also famously said, you have kids, I'll entertain them. Right. Yeah. He didn't want kids. Did not want kids. No. And he wrote for people. And he also famously said, you have kids,
I'll entertain them.
Right, yeah, he didn't want kids.
Did not want kids.
No, and he never had them, so his wish came true.
So he was already pretty famous
by the time World War II came around.
And he actually volunteered to become a soldier,
but he was sent to Hollywood to work at what was called
Fort Fox.
Yeah, this was strange.
I mean, I had heard of the signal core.
Well, the signal core is everything from code,
like code and code breakers,
all the way to psychological operations.
Oh, I thought the signal core was just like
the people that made documentaries and stuff.
This was a division within the signal core.
Gotcha.
And so he was basically in this division with Frank Capra
and some other like screenwriters, actors,
like basically anybody who had anything to do
with visual entertainment was put into this group
in Hollywood on the Fox lot at what was called Fort Fox.
And he, that's where he spent most of the war,
although there was a fascinating story
about a time when he went to Europe
because he had to go get approvals
for a documentary he had worked on
from all the high ranking generals in Europe.
So he went from headquarters to headquarters throughout Europe.
And while he was in Luxembourg, he visited some of his friends.
And he basically got the skinny, they think, on the ghost army.
You know the ghost army where they had inflatable tanks.
And it was meant to make America's military look way bigger than it was.
And these guys were running psychological operations.
Well, Dr. Suits was friends with some of the higher ups in the ghost army.
And they think that they showed him on a map like where to go to go see some of these.
Well, in between the time he left and the time he got there, that was suddenly behind
enemy lines.
Yeah, the battle of the bulge literally started around him.
Around him.
Yeah, and he was like, I was just driving around thinking like it was just hard to find friendly
troops like as part of combat.
Belgium sure is pretty.
But he ended up inadvertently spending three days, ten miles behind enemy lines during
the battle of the bulge and just barely made it out with his life.
Yeah, he was rescued by the Brit,
but he would eventually become a Lieutenant Colonel
in his short stint as a late 30-year-old,
he was like, I think, 38 when he first went in.
Right.
Which really kind of interesting piece of backstory.
Well, he was, we left out a pretty,
pretty big part of his formative years early on
in his career was he wanted to become,
he wanted to have a say in the direction America took in World War II.
He was very much in favor of going to war against the Nazis and Japan and Italy.
One of the reasons why he was in favor was because he was extremely anti-fascist.
He hated fascism, and he got a job at a liberal magazine, I think a newspaper actually, called
PM, that was founded in New York, and it was founded with the I to basically call people
out who were pushing other people around.
It was very liberal, very anti-fascist, very pro-World War II, a little bit in call at that
at the time, and it was very anti-isolationist too.
And Dr. Seuss was drawing editorial cartoons, very political editorial cartoons, about
seven days a week for this magazine.
And he did some really good work in it actually. Well, yeah. And then in the in the army, he actually made films. He was making
documentaries right alongside Frank Capra. He had one series of training videos
called Private Snafu that were animated, but they were the work of Chuck Jones
actually. It's just so crazy about all this talent that's like in the army producing these things at
the time.
But he went on to make live action documentaries, one called Your Job in Germany, another
called Our Job in Japan.
MacArthur stopped the release of Our Job in Japan and apparently General Patton stormed
out of a screening of one of the other ones.
And I couldn't find the word word but it said he uttered
One loud curse words. Oh, you couldn't find it. No, do you did you it was BS? Oh, okay
I was trying to think of what it would be sure
I was like but one word so it wasn't the f word unless it was just a very just long drawn out
All right, yes, that makes sense. Yeah a very just long drawn out. Right. They don't have time for you though.
All right, BS, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Which I don't understand.
I don't know what the problem was.
But they were both the R job in Japan or your job in Germany.
Yeah.
Whereas about occupation, post-occupation life in Germany or Japan and what we wanted to do.
Yeah, you can watch your job in Germany on YouTube.
Yeah, and our job in Japan too.
Yeah, so he recut those basically,
kind of rewrote and recut those later on
and retitled them Hitler lives and designed for death.
No, he didn't.
They were recut around him without his say.
Oh, no, no, no.
He and his wife later got those films and recut them
and won an Academy Award. Oh, okay. Yeah. I had read and his wife later got those films and recut them in one academy award.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
I had read that a producer went and did some recutting against their wishes and made it
way worse than they originally intended.
Oh, well, that may have happened.
And then maybe they then later on, we recut it.
Got the Oscar for their version.
Right.
I don't know.
Okay.
But we left out a lot actually because he was actually had previous to the army had already
written children's books.
Like he went fully into this because of a ship trip that he took.
In 1936.
Let's walk it back a little bit.
They went on a transatlantic voyage aboard the MS Kung's, and apparently the ship's engine had this beat, this hypnotic
throbbing sound that just really stuck with them.
And it got into his head, and so he started composing rhyming couplets that match with
this rhythm.
Kind of like, that's my SS Kongs home impression. All right, well, it ended up being
what's called anapestic tetrameter,
which is what he would make his career
on this poetic meter.
You know what that made me think of Chuck,
that like I've never heard those words together in my life,
but no one ever taught me how to read a doctor's
soup book. It's almost like we have some ingrained thing in our brain to read
things in that kind of rhythm or rhyme. You know what I mean? Or is it just that
my parents read that to me and that's where I picked it up from? But who taught
them? I don't know. Who taught anybody how to read something in rhymes? It's just
like you just know it intuitive. And even when even when you, when you're not reading it
in the right rhythm, your brain realizes it
and corrects you and you go back and reread it
the right way.
Like when you get to the next line,
you're like, oh wait, that's out of beat or whatever.
Like you figure it out naturally.
And I wonder why we're geared toward that.
Yeah, it's funny too, because I obviously read a lot
of kids' books every night now.
And some of them are great. And some of them just like, they'll do a word that doesn't quite
rhyme, and I'm always like, come on.
Come on.
Or they'll stuff too much in a line, and it's not like graceful in the read.
I'm like, man, this is lame.
Do better.
Orange and door hinge.
Hey, that's not bad.
Well, that's Eminem.
Oh, okay.
You're very famously can rhyme something with orange. Which I found out because bad. Well, that's Eminem. Oh, okay. You're very famously,
can rhyme something with orange.
Which I found out because I think I said
nothing rhymes with orange.
You remember,
I guess everyone's always said that because that's true.
Well, I meant it.
Door hinge, that's funny.
So he created a children's book
on that anapestic to trameter called,
and this is a story no one can beat
that was later changed and published in 1937
as, and to think that I saw it on Mulberry Street,
because he had an old friend that he ran into from Dartmouth
that turned out to be a children's book editor at Vanguard Press.
So I read an account of the story
and the person saying, telling the story said,
had he been walking on the other side of the street
that day, he may have never become a children's author?
Like it was that fateful.
His friend from Dartmouth was a new children's book editor
at Vanguard, you said?
Yeah.
And it was so new that he was looking for material.
And Dr. Seuss happened to be walking around
with the manuscript on him and just
happened to be down there and they ran into each other and this book got published and
that was the one where he first made his name as a children's book writer. You're right.
It's shout out to Stephen Barb book agent. That's right. Yeah. So this, this, uh,
antipestic to trameter is what he basically stuck with the rest of his career.
He would alter it here and there, use other meters here and there.
But this is where he, you know, as Ed said, that was his bread and butter.
And it's very wall-slike.
Uh, you can count it off in three, four time.
And it just was sort of perfect for kids books.
Right.
And with that first kids book, um, and to think I saw in a mulberry street,
apparently it's about a kid named Marco who sees a horse and cart on the street. And as he's retelling it,
it just becomes this bigger and bigger and more like bizarre and grand thing that he saw.
And this will come back later on in the episode. Yeah, so he's writing these books. He's doing okay.
episode. Yeah, so he's writing these books. He's doing okay. His fourth book was called Horton Hatches the Egg. I think that's where we first meet Horton. But he wasn't like
lighting the world on fire. And then that's when he goes in the army.
Right. Let me tell you the story about getting caught in the Battle of the Bulge again.
Here we go. So he makes it through World War II. He escapes with his life from the battle of the
Bulge. And when he comes out of World War II, he goes right back to writing books. And he wrote a
few more in the 40s. I believe he wrote Yurtle the Turtle, which I know is an allegory for Hitler.
And he was on record, say, yeah, apparently the early drafts of it, he had drawn a Hiller
mustache on Yurtle, the turtle.
It's about anti-authoritarianism.
And they're like, is that Hitler or Michael Jordan?
Does he have a Hitler mustache?
He did very famously in the one Hane's TV commercial and everyone was like, uh, is
someone not told him?
I don't, I didn't see that.
Oh yeah, I'll have to show you pictures.
I had my head in the sand like I was Charles Lindbergh or something.
Oh, that's a nice circular ref.
It was just for you and me.
So he was writing some more and he was, I mean,
he was selling like thousands of copies every, every time he released a book.
He was a known children's author.
He'd already established his style as something
that was pretty recognizable around the United States.
But it wasn't until the mid-50s that things really changed for him.
Yeah.
Oh, wow, that is a Hitler mustache.
There's no mistake in that.
It's a decision.
So I think in 1955, there was a book written called Why Can't Johnny Read, right?
Okay.
And again, he wrote off flesh.
And I realized what we've jumped over.
We'll get back to sure.
I'm not ready for it yet.
All right.
Again, he wrote off flesh.
It was this.
It was flesh.
Yeah.
FLE.
We'll see a part after each.
That'd be a good one though. Yeah, Rudy flesh. Yeah, FLE will see a porn actor. That'd be a good one though. Yeah, Rudy flesh.
Yeah, you'd have to call yourself Rudy too.
Anyway, Rudolph flesh. He wrote, why can't Johnny Reed?
And it was basically like an indictment of the American public school system,
the education system and how we taught kids to read.
And it was equally an indictment of like Dick and Jane
and the way that kids used to read or be taught to read. Was this basically here are words on a page
memorize them. This is a red ball. This is the word red. Don't be an idiot. Red ball. Say it.
It's kind of the worst way to teach kids stuff. It is. And the guy in the article said, he wrote
an article in life later on
too. He said, you know who'd be a great children's book author to teach kids how to read is Dr.
Seuss. He's already writing books for kids. Yeah. But if he just directed that toward actually
teaching them how to read, the be that kids would definitely want that. And it turns out
that an editor, I think at hot and m Mifflin or somebody wherever, wherever Dr.
Suss was writing at the time.
Dundr Mifflin.
Dundr Mifflin.
What you got me.
He said, that's actually a pretty good idea.
And that's where we got the cat in the hat.
That's right.
It was originally meant as a reading primer.
I think there were.
225.
225 words.
And very famously famously his editor
bet him after that that he could not write a book with only 50 words
and he went, take this book, Green Eggs and Ham
and shove it and shove it and give me my $50.
And that is supposedly true, his editor bet him that he could not do so
and that's where Green Eggs and Ham came from.
Yeah, and it's 50 words exactly.
That's right.
So at this point, he went from Ed says,
he went from being a well-known children's author
to probably the best known children's author in the world.
Yeah.
He'd shown, not only could he write,
fun, whimsical stories with the disguised moral lesson
in the middle of it too, with great illustrations
and hand drawn fonts and all that. He could actually teach the world's children how to read
English at least.
Yeah. And then from that success, he wrote that same year, how the Grinch stole Christmas.
That's a big year, man. So, so can the hat and the Grinch of the same year, right?
Yeah. Okay. Yeah, which is
just amazing. And then in 1966, of course, we get the very famous TV cartoon adaptation,
which people still love and enjoy today, including me. Oh, yeah. And he ended up being so successful
that they gave him his own imprint at random house with his wife, Helen Palmer Geisel, who was kind of by all accounts
that the woman behind the man she was an author herself. She wrote quite a few books,
one called, do you know what I'm going to do next Saturday?
To you. One called, I know what she did last summer.
Right.
Man, it's funny.
Adding those two words just makes it threaten that it's a horror novel.
Uh, one called why I built the Bugle House and one called I was kissed by a seal at the
zoo.
That sounds great.
Uh, so I didn't want to just kind of wash over her because she, she was an author
and, uh, very sadly she ended up committing suicide very late in life.
Yeah, within a couple of years of an affair that he had.
Yeah.
And he'd apparently had multiple affairs and her suicide note supposedly referenced this
feeling that she'd kind of been overshadowed by him in his career.
Yeah.
And like you said, she was very much the woman behind the man.
And I think expected to support him and all that thing.
And she did.
She put her own career away so that she could handle his correspondence and business affairs.
She was in charge of correspondence to like sick kids that wrote them or entire classes.
And she was, he, all he was the artistic genius who just needed to be left alone so he could make
these books every year and she handled everything else. Right. And ask somebody to put their career
away so that you can have yours. It's a big thing to ask somebody. Yeah. I mean, she was 69 when she,
and I, at a belief I said, committed suicide earlier, I apologize, I know we don't use that term
anymore. Yeah. So we say now that she died by suicide.
Right, right.
Yeah, because committed makes it sound like,
oh my God, was she committed a sin?
Yeah, and we people have written in about that.
And I was, we were both glad to be made aware of that.
So she was 69 years old and apparently also suffered
from Gileum, bear, bar.
Gileum, bar a Gieim Bar-e.
Syndrome.
Yeah, we got corrected on that some other time entire,
remember.
A powder pronounce it.
Yeah.
So, I mean, who knows why someone eventually
takes that path in life?
Could be a lot of factors.
Yeah.
But yeah, October 23rd, 1967,
she overdosed on medication.
After they've been married for 40 years, too. Yeah, October 23rd 1967, she overdosed on medication. After they've been married for 40 years too.
Yeah, man.
And so shortly after that, he married Audrey Diamond.
Yes.
Geisel, who's his widow who is a belief still alive and basically running his estate still.
Yeah, her name was Audrey Stone Diamond, but it was DIMO and D know a. Oh, yeah, which is interesting. I wonder if it's very efficient. But yeah, she became soy
And he went just go ahead and get used to it. It's so she's like really I've always said soy
He's like I love you and she had two daughters
And he said that they'd love boarding school.
Yeah.
And she went, okay, and she later on even said,
this is a direct quote, she said,
they wouldn't have been happy with Ted
and Ted wouldn't have been happy with them.
Yeah, he really did not want kids or kids to be around.
He just liked doing the books that he liked to do.
It's pretty interesting.
So he, that 1957 year, that was a big breakout year for him.
And that was kind of the year that he became the doctor's suits that we see. But he kept writing
for many, many years, I mean, up until his death in 1991, he apparently cranked out like a book a year.
Yeah.
Um, some of the, some of them over time kind of took on much more progressive tones until
he became the Dr. Seuss that we see today. So prior to that though, um, in recent years,
some people have kind of said, Hey, you know, Dr. Seuss had some really racist,
bigoted stuff in his early work.
And it's become kind of this national conversation
to kind of figure out how to do this,
because everyone loves Dr. Seuss.
Loves Dr. Seuss.
There's nobody who doesn't like Dr. Seuss.
But if you, or his work, I should say.
But if you start digging into,
especially some of his early work,
it becomes problematic.
So you want to take a break?
Okay, all right.
All right, let's take a break
and we will take part in that national conversation
right after this.
Suffice should go.
What up, y'all.
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All right, Chuck. So it's national conversation time. So Dr. Seuss, especially in his earliest work
as Jack O'Anne and Judge Rider, the Human Magazine Rider, A lot of his stuff was extremely racist.
Yes.
As Ed puts it, not just racist for the time,
but monstrously racist stuff.
Yeah, like full on blackface caricatures,
depicted African American characters as lazy,
as savages, have too many kids.
He made jokes about slavery. There's one way
we can't even read on this show, but it's awful. Yeah, right. He also, especially
as after Pearl Harbor directed a lot of his creative energy toward making ugly
caricatures of Japan and depicting Japanese and Japanese Americans in really
unflattering light too.
Yeah, and apparently supported internment.
And this isn't, you know, you don't want to drag somebody through the mud.
But if we're going to give a picture of the man, this is who he was earlier in his life.
Right.
So Ed makes a really good point.
I think Ed's a great American for the way that he kind of
kind of handled this too. He's saying that if you look at his early stuff, he was a younger man
at the time. And I think we should also say, Ed qualifies as like none of this excuses anything.
Sure. But you know, look at the whole picture of the person. If you look at his earlier
stuff, or his worst, most racist stuff is when he was youngest. And his most progressive
stuff that everybody knows and loves as Dr. Susses when the world was kind of changing, too.
Yeah, it's not like in 1989, he was like, I'm going to deliver, I'm going to serve up a good old
racist cartoon. Right, exactly. He invented C-monkeys or something like that, right?
So he kind of progressed with the world and not only did he progress with the world and kind
of change his views to take on much more progressive stuff, themes like, like a bigotry with the
snitches is about discriminating against people into how ridiculous that is, how people are actually people.
A lot of people point to Horton, here's a who, as a bit of a mea culpa for his treatment of the Japanese prior to World War II and during World War II.
The Lorax is obviously pro-environmentalism. Yeah.
He fully changed one of his books altogether, an earlier version of...
And to think of so on a Mulberry Street?
Yeah, it had the word Chinaman in there.
It was worse than Chinaman.
And he changed that to Chinese person, like in the publication of the book for future
printings.
Right.
So, he definitely evolved his works of vaults.
He never came out publicly, said, hey, I'm really sorry about all the racist stuff that
I did earlier.
By the time he died in 1990, I think that that really wasn't the way that the world was
turning at the time.
But he does seem to have evolved and changed with the times
and did go back and revise some stuff
that had crept into his work.
Yeah, and this has come to light more prominently
in the past few years because there have been
like some book festivals and children's literature
festivals that have either been boycotted
or where they've sort of tried to
make him a little less prominent.
Right.
The cat and the hat, I think, was used.
Wasn't it like an official...
Read across America.
Right.
Use the mascot for it.
Yeah, and did they officially remove the cat and the hat?
I think they've backed a little bit away from the cat and the hat
as a mascot, if not entirely. And I think that they've backed a little bit away from the cat in the hat as a mascot, if not entirely.
And I think that they've kind of like, Dr. Sussan books are not like the focal point
of the read across America campaign, like they were.
Right.
And then last year, Melania Trump made the news when she gifted a library, some Dr. Sussan
books, and the librarian refused that gift and said they are steeped in racist propaganda caricatures
and harmful stereotypes.
I don't know that that all is necessarily true, is it?
Yeah, I think that might have been a little too harsh.
Well, I mean, if I'm wrong, I don't want to know,
the only thing that I've seen that could be pointed to in his work...
Like his books.
Was the reference in drawing of the Chinese guy?
Yeah.
In his first book, and to think I saw it on Mulberry Street,
I didn't see anything else.
I saw some reference that maybe the cat and the hat
was supposed to be blackface, but I saw that one place.
Right.
And nowhere else, it seemed to be his earlier work,
not as children's books. I didn't
see any racist propaganda that was hidden in the books. If anything, the books that you
would give a library, I don't know what title she gave, would have been the more progressive
stuff.
Yes, she didn't go there and say, here, look, here's the old jack-a-lantern.
Here's the really dirty stuff. College humor racist cartoons.
And yeah, to say that his work was steeped in racist propaganda when talking about the
children's books is, I agree, it's not accurate.
Right.
What I'm trying to figure out is that librarian hip to something we don't know about.
Right.
Or not.
I'm very curious to know, like if we didn't dig quite deep enough, I'm a little surprised
because you know us. But I want to know if we're missing something. Yeah, for sure. I found
an article where they were just asking a lot of professionals in children's literature what they
thought about all this because I'm a big dummy. I don't know how to figure this stuff out of my own.
And Niley, she's a professor of children's lit at Vanderbilt, said this,
just as every author or illustrator as I think Theodore Geisel was a product of his time,
we should not judge him by today's standards, but we must evaluate his books that we decide
to share with children using today's standards.
That is a really great point.
Yeah, we cannot wallow in our own nostalgia when we make choices for the books we share
with young children. There are simply too many outstanding books available.
Especially also if the books that we're raising our kids on, it's new to them.
Right.
If it is steeped in racist propaganda that we're not realizing we're sharing or perpetuating,
then yeah, that shouldn't be the case.
And Ed makes the great point that in the 1920s and 30s, it was the exceptional American
who broke out of that mold and was
very progressive.
And I wish he would have been one of those, but he wasn't.
Yeah.
And I think that's one of the reasons why there's such a cognitive dissonance when you
find this stuff out is because that's what you think of Dr. Seuss based on his work.
Like he would be that kind of guy, but he was human.
His work is larger than him, is I think what it is.
And that's the case with just about everything it seems like.
Yeah, I mean, I don't want this to taint your reading
of how the Grinch Stole Christmas this year.
Although another thing that he was called out on once was his,
there was no female protagonist in any of his books either.
Again, a product of the time. He was a man writing about little male characters.
But he went and created a Daisy-Headed Maisie after that.
Right. So again, his books became more progressive
further on in his career and he handled things like segregation and discrimination, like with the snitches, the butter battle book
was a clear glaring allegory for the Cold War
and the mutual destruction and arms race,
of kind of a haunting book that ends
without any resolution with both sides,
the yukes and the zukes, I think,
with their bombs pointed at one another.
And it doesn't, it's not like,
and they lived happily over after,
it's like, what's gonna happen?
Yeah.
And then his last book that he wrote and published
while he was alive was, oh, the places you'll go.
Right.
Which I had no idea was published in 1990, did you?
I didn't know anything about it.
So it was, it was, it was his last book that was published
while he was alive.
It's also his top selling book.
So some of these other books have been around
for decades longer than all the places you'll go.
But all the places you'll go is this top selling book
because it's given to grads every spring.
There's a new batch of graduates
who get all the places you'll go is a gift.
And like 10 million copies have been sold.
Because it's about like your future,
from what a way to, that's a good deal.
Yeah, just like doing things and taking risks
and like trying stuff and you can do it
and it'll be hard and you're gonna run into problems.
But you know, you're a good person
and you're going to make good choices.
And I have a story about this.
Oh yeah.
So last night, I was talking to you, choices. And I have a story about this. Oh yeah.
So last night, I was talking to Yumi and I was like,
just out of nowhere.
I was like, did you know that all of the place
you'll go was only published in 1990,
but it's Dr. Sousa's greatest selling book?
And she just looked at me kind of like a little flapper gas
to like, why would you say that?
I was like, well, we're doing a Dr. Sousa episode tomorrow.
And she's like, that's really weird. I'll be right back.
And she went into our bedroom and came back out with a copy of
all the places you'll go and said,
this has been under your pillow.
She said I was going to give this to you tomorrow
for the last episode of the end of the world.
Oh, wow.
But I just happened to bring it up the day before.
And that's crazy.
Yeah, I thought that was really surprising.
Man, how things work out.
But I read it as recently as last night. I'm like, this is an amazing, even for Su's, it's
an amazing book.
Like an article I read said that somebody, somebody said like, you can tell that he knew
this was the last book that that was going to be published while he was alive, that he
wanted this to be his swan song.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I would not be surprised talking about his a more progressive
Views and sort of catching up with the time if either Helen and or Audrey as the women behind the man
We're helping him along in that respect sure and saying like hey get with it
Oh, oh like for changing his views maybe I thought that as well. I could totally see that.
Yeah, because if you think about it, Helen Palmer came into his life.
Yeah, I, yeah, I could see her having that influence on him.
Yeah.
He passed away, finally, of cancer in September 24th, 1991 at 87.
And I remember this because that was a rough week.
I was in college and he and Miles Davis died
about five or six days apart.
Oh, really?
And I just remember being like, man,
this is one of those tough ones.
Yeah.
Produdes my age.
Yeah.
They were bee poppers and children's book readers.
At the same time.
I've got one last thing for you about Dr. Seuss.
Do you have anything else?
I got one more thing too. You first. Okay, I'll go first. He was a voracious chain smoker. Oh,
interesting. So much so that even back in like the 50s and 60s, he knew he needed to lay
off sometimes. So when he needed to lay off of smoking, he would take up the corn cob
pipe that he kept turn up seeds in. And at any time he wanted a smoke rather than light it, he would put a water dropper in there.
And then when the turn up seeds started to sprout, he would go back to cigarettes.
What?
Yes.
I don't fully understand that.
He would start a little seed bud.
Corn cob pipe and his pipe.
And then rather than light it, he would just put a seed dropper in him.
Yeah, yeah., puff on it,
but nothing was going on.
It was all just mental or oral fixation.
And then after about three days of doing this,
the seeds would sprout, germinate,
and he'd be like, okay, I can go back to cigarettes now.
So we take about three days off of cigarettes,
and he used the crop of turn up greens as his indicator.
I thought you were going to say that that went on to feed
like the children in poor neighborhoods or something.
No.
You hate turnips, kids in these turnips.
Turnips are great.
I agree.
I'm a root vegetable man myself.
So my last thing in 2007, the federal judge
received a hard boiled egg in the mail from an inmate in prison,
protesting his diet in prison. And the federal judge rendered a decision, and apparently it was
worked up the ladder. I can't remember even what it was about, but he rendered a decision,
Thusley. I do not like eggs in the file. This is Judge James Murehead. I do not like eggs in the file. This is Judge James Murad.
I do not like them in any style.
I will not take them fried or boiled.
I will not take them poached or broiled.
I will not take them softer scrambled,
despite an argument well-rambled.
No fan I am of the egg at hand, destroy that egg today.
Today, today, I say without delay.
And they threw them out of court and fired him.
Right.
Because he was drunk.
Yeah.
No, I don't know.
Wow, I wonder what came out of that.
I don't know.
And it gave very little information
about what the case was even on.
I know.
Like the guys don't really,
this is a serious complaint, please.
You're focusing on the wrong thing.
Someone help me.
Oh goodness.
If you want more about Dr. Sue's go research
at Make Your Own Decisions about the man,
the work, all that stuff, okay?
Agreed.
And since I said that, it's time for listener mail.
No, this is our last show of the year.
So no listener mail, it's just our time of the year
to thank everyone here and here.
Is this the end of 10 years?
Yes.
Or it's sort of in the middle.
April is the beginning and end of a year.
Right, but the end of our calendar year and we just thank everyone for hanging in for this
long with us.
Yeah.
It's amazing that we're still allowed to do this job.
Yeah, hanging there. It'll pay off eventually.
And we're going to keep at it forever forever. And on a
personal note, a very happy birthday to my dear sweet wife, Yumi. Happy birthday,
Yumi. Happy birthday, Yumi. And thank you guys for being with us for yet
another year. We'll see you next year, everybody.
Stuff you should know is a production of I Heart Radio. For more podcasts, my
heart radio, visit the I Heart Radio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Tune in to the new podcast, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much.
Like Easy Listening, but for fiction.
If you've overdosed on bad news,
we invite you into a world where the glimmers of goodness
in everyday life are all around you.
I'm Catherine Nicolai, and I'm an architect of COSI.
Come spend some time where everyone is welcome
and the default is kindness.
Listen, relax, enjoy.
Listen to stories from the village of
nothing much. On the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. And I'm back. The greatest blog of all time, Victory Light, is now the greatest podcast of all time.
And I got some friends with me.
Victory Light is a foul.
So get your cut ready, because it's about the run of over.
You can listen to Victory Light on the IHR radio app,
Apple Podcast, or whatever you get your podcasting.
It's a weird world out there,
so lean into the weirdness with the Stuff to Blow Your Mind
podcast.
Explore the nature of dreams and how dreaming has influenced culture.
Appreciate the deep strangeness of terrestrial biology as well as purely imagine creatures
that reveal much about human nature.
Explore topics scientific, historical, philosophical and and sometimes monstrous on stuff to blow your mind.
Listen to stuff to blow your mind on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.