Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Earwax: Live With It
Episode Date: February 6, 2021Despite tons of people using cotton swabs each day to clean the earwax from their ears, cerumen (as earwax is clinically known) is actually quite beneficial to the health of your ears - and even kind ...of ingenious as your body's defense goes. Learn more in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Hi folks, earwax colon live with it is your Saturday select this week.
This is from March 12, 2015. And boy, this was a good one. There's a lot of,
a lot of things people don't understand about earwax and what you should do with it and what
you shouldn't do with it. So this was very instructive for both of us and should be for
you as well. So enjoy and don't ear candle. For God's sake.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
There's Jerry. It's Stuff You Should Know. He just shrugged. Like, what are we going to do?
That's what we are. Yeah. Episode number? Seven something. Yeah. I have no idea. I don't either.
In the 700s, folks, if you think there's only 300, because you're on iTunes, you're in for
to be doubly surprised. Yeah. Well, somebody tweeted recently,
I've just found the How Stuff Works app and there's way more stuff you should
know than there is on iTunes. I hate you guys now. All right. Wait. I was cool with 301,
but that's it. I had someone ask you the other day if we feel like we're running out of things
topics. Clearly we are, because we're recording on earwax today.
Yep. Exactly. What'd you tell them? Look for boogers in the near future. No, I said no,
that sometimes it feels a little like, oh my gosh, what are we going to do? Yeah.
But there's gazillions of topics in the world. At least. And gazillions of scientific. That's
right. What is that? How many zeros? Is that a real number? I don't know. I don't think it is.
Let's say 90 zeros. It's a real number if you're eight years old. Right. But watch,
it probably is a real number. Yeah. I think a jillion is a real number.
A bazillion. A jillion definitely is. I would guess gazillion is by now. I might
actually look that up. I mean, there's just like a handful of mathematicians who are in
charge of naming that kind of stuff, you know? So, Chuckers, while you're looking that up,
do you have earwax? Do you have problem earwax? No. No. I don't either. No, I wouldn't say so.
No. It is a little distressing though, even though we will find out, it is awesome and
exactly how it's supposed to work. Yeah. When it just sort of falls out of your ear onto your
shoulder. Yeah. That's ideal actually. Yeah, because earwax in your physiology in general
doesn't care about what social group you're a part of. Nope. It's just like, here's some
earwax on your shoulder. Deal with it. Although, and I didn't look up why this is true,
apparently in northeastern Asian countries, like Korea and China, their earwax is a little
different. They're more likely to have the dry earwax, which can be hard and red to black
in color, which sounds gross, and flaky or pale yellow, whereas over here we have that
nasty, gooey, orangey mess. Wet earwax is what it's called. Yes. And the reason why actually
is because of the ABC11 gene. Oh, is that why? Yeah, they isolated the gene that causes the
type of earwax that you get. And it turns out that say the W mutation is, or the D mutation,
dry earwax is recessive. So the only way to get dry earwax is if both of your parents
have dry earwax, both carry the D gene or D mutation of the ABC11 gene. Well, I have both.
Most people have our WDs. Oh, okay. Yeah. So you have to get two D alleles,
two dry earwax alleles to have dry earwax yourself. If you have a W and a D or two Ws,
you're going to have wet. And for some reason- But I have both. Can't you? Like one ear's dry
and the other's wet? No. You know, if I get the old cotton swab out, which-
Now you're introducing something way beyond genetics. That's not even apogenetics. That's
human intervention. The point is, if I get the cotton swab out, that's when I'll get out the
orangey wet stuff. But I'll also have the dry flaky stuff that falls out sometimes.
Probably, I would guess. And I'm no seramin expert. I'm no seraminist.
Now, what's the word? I actually looked it up for someone who studies this.
Oh, really? It has to have to do with seramin. I can't find it. No.
So seraminist isn't ringing a bell? No. It's wrong. I can't find what it is. Sorry.
Okay. Well, the person who's- I'm not a person who studies earwax.
Okay. But what I would guess is that when you're digging in there, you're getting to the
fresher earwax. That's what I think. And then as it works itself further and further out your ear,
which is the natural process, it's exposed to drier air, the ambient air, and it dries out
and flakes off, which is what it's supposed to do. So I don't think you have both. I think if you
have both, the stuff inside your ear would be dry as well. Yeah. Okay. All right. Well, that makes
sense. So what earwax is, or seramin, C-E-R-U-M-E-N is the scientific name.
But I'm sure they call it wax. It's the third chubby angel.
No, the cerebrum. Oh, yeah. Okay. It is made up of secretions of a couple of little specialized
glands in the skin on the outer third of the ear canal. Yes. So you have your sebaceous glands,
and they're going to secrete, and these names all sound so gross. But they're perfect for describing
what they are. Yeah. They secrete sebum, S-E-V-U-M. And then you have an apocrine sweat gland that's
modified that produces... It's got a hemi. Yeah. It combines with the sebum, and that's where you
get your seramin. And so sebum in and of itself is fairly normal. If you like take your fingertip
and rub it alongside where your nose folds into your face. Yeah, get a little dry skin there.
Well, if your stuff is at all oily, that oil is sebum. Okay. So apparently it mixes in in your
ear with that kind of apocrine gland, like you said, to form seramin, which is its own thing.
It's not just sebum. Right. But all of it is basically a fatty, oily, lippity
compound that's secreted by these glands in the skin cells, specialized glands.
Yeah. About 60% keratin, which is a protein. And then, like you said, the fatty acids, you've
got dead skin cells, you've got hair follicles. Dead bugs, little bugs. Yeah. Lots of stuff that
comes out in this. And like you said. Dust. It probably dust mites then too. Sure. And like
you said, it's produced in the inner third of the outer ear. Outer one third of the ear canal.
Okay. Yeah. And when it's produced in there, it migrates outward thanks to the motion of
the ocean. Right. And you talking and chewing. Oh, is that what it is? Yeah. I couldn't figure
out like, how does your earwax move? But it's just from jaw movement. Normal jaw movement moves
the newer stuff outward. Man. And as it's coming out, all the gunk and stuff that's protected your
ear from are moved out with it. So the stuff that flakes off and falls on your shoulder
that everybody points and laughs at at the party, that is filled with all the stuff that
your earwax caught along the way. It's a beautiful, elegant process. Probably the most beautiful aspect
of the entire human experience. Well, I think you're making a joke. But I really do think that
like it's the little things like that about like I'm amazed about the function of the brain and
of course the organs and all that. But just something as simple as that mechanical talking
and chewing will work earwax out of your ear. It's just so basic and I think it's awesome. I
think it's really cool actually. I know what you mean. I agree with you. So some people produce a
lot of this, I was going to say gross stuff, but have you seen Paddington? The movie? Yeah.
No, I heard it was really good. It's very good. Super, super cute, really well done. Why did you
see that? Just because it's a cute movie. Really? Yeah. Saw it in theaters and everything. Please
tell me you took Yumi. Yeah, it was me and Yumi. And as a matter of fact, it was just me and Yumi
in the whole theater. But if it's just you and no kids, then it's like somebody might want to call
the security. And they did. I'm just a Paddington fan. But I am now. So anyway, there is a part
where there's a part featuring earwax in Paddington. Oh really? It does not celebrate the beauty of
earwax. It's the exact opposite. And actually, Yumi was like... Oh really? It got her. It was
really gross, but awesome. Is that a spoiler? Anyway, go see Paddington. Is that a spoiler?
No. Okay. I don't think so. Maybe for like a five-year-old. All right. So like I said,
some people produce a lot of the stuff. Some people don't produce as much and they don't really know
why. But they do know that sometimes stress and anxiety can increase production of earwax,
which I think is interesting. Makes sense. Hormones. Sure. Hormones affected. Your glands go off.
It also said that some drugs can increase your earwax production. And I looked all over and
couldn't find the drugs. But if stress and anxiety does... Hyowasca. I imagine yeah.
Or cocaine would probably make you produce more earwax or something. Oh yeah. When you put that
stuff into your ear. Yeah. Or something that makes you like chew your jaw a lot. Oh sure.
That could probably get more earwax out. Yeah. Interesting. Never thought about that.
I couldn't find anything else. As gross as you might think earwax is though. It actually is
a great thing for your body. And there's a very good reason why you have it. Because there are
four main functions that your earwax is going to serve, my friend. Okay. One of them is it creates
an acidic environment. That's great. That kills, helps kill bacteria and fungi. Oh, even better.
Number two. Well, that's a big deal too because your inner ear like that is really
a place where fungus and bacteria would thrive because it's moist and dark. And you know what we
always say about moist, dark places. Fungi thrives. That's right. The thing is is it doesn't seem like
that'd be a big problem to have fungi in your ear. But it would because it would affect things like
your balance. Yeah. Nausea, ear aches. It just wouldn't be good. So the fact that earwax produces
an acidic environment alone makes earwax a beautiful thing and to be celebrated. So if we
could just stop there. We could, but you can go on. Like you said, there's four and that was just
one quarter of these benefits that earwax bestows. Secondly, it is a lube. It lubricates your
ear canal basically to keep it from drying out. And you know, you don't want the inner ear becoming
all itchy and dry and crackety. No. And you want to hear something weird that I have a new
personal hygiene thing I have to do as of yesterday, starting yesterday. Something I'll
probably have to do my whole life. Hair. I have to moisturize my ears now. I thought you're going
to say hair inside the ear. I was like that. I have been doing that for a while. It's getting,
I got a little fro inside. An ear fro? Yeah. But no, like taking moisturizer and like rubbing on
my ears because I got a haircare yesterday and like my ears were exposed and all of a sudden I'm
like, wait, why is like there a streak of white on my ear and they're bright red? And I realized
like my ears are chapped and that is brand new or else I just noticed it. So I'm an ear moisturizer
now. Yeah. You had that 70s earmuff hairstyle cut off of your ears. Right. So your ears were
exposed. Yeah. It was pretty 70s. Well, I was growing my hair out to create like a blank slate
of, you know, that could be worked with. It was kind of longish for you. Yeah. It was really long
and it was that 70s like earmuff thing. It wasn't quite. It was getting there. It looks good. Very
nice. Thanks. Sure. Did that make you uncomfortable? No, I was fishing for that. Oh, it's the whole
reason I brought that story up. You looked either sheepish or really uncomfortable with that.
A little bit both. All right. Gotcha. All right. Number three on top four things that earwax does
is your sermon and your hair fall. Just like letterman. Exactly. It's going to discourage
everyone's worst nightmare, which is a spider crawling in there, which I covered, you know,
that happened to Emily. I think I talked about that on one of the shows. Right. That was genuinely
one of the most awesome things that I've ever experienced because it did not happen to me.
Wasn't there a picture? Didn't you post a picture of it or something like that? No, but I think I
posted a picture of a happening to some woman in China, I think. Okay. That was frightening.
And it was a picture of a spider looking out of the woman's ear canal, right? Yeah. Yeah,
but Emily's, if people haven't heard this story, it was, I think it was in the middle of the night
or something. She was like, I got this weird fluttering in my ear and I don't know what's
going on in there. And I was like, well, you know, took her in the bathroom and shined a light
and I was like, holy crap. And the spider, I think, worked, didn't it? With the flashlight?
Remember, like, if you look at your, I don't know, did the... Jerry's saying yes. Yes. Okay. So there
you go. Well, all I remember thinking is, Emily, I don't want to have to break this to you, but
you have a spider in your ear. You didn't like chloroformer first? I should have. Yeah, you should.
Yeah, she was not excited about that. I'm sure. She was not pumped. So, well, what was the process
for getting it out? Well, I looked on the internet super quickly to see how, and they said to flush
it out and use tweezers. Oh my gosh, you did use tweezers? Yeah. And I put the water in there and
it kind of loosened it up and went in there and got the tweezers. And I was like, look at this.
How big was it? Oh, I mean, it wasn't huge, but it was enough spider for her taste.
Sure. Yeah. More than enough, right? Dude, I can't imagine that. Some people sleep with Vaseline
in their ears to keep bugs from crawling in. Yeah. Like, that is a thing. Yeah. I mean,
people don't want bugs in their ears. No, but that's taken, I mean, that's a severe paranoia.
I think if you're sleeping with earmuffs or Vaseline in your ears. Yeah. Earmuffs, I hadn't
thought about that. Oh, so you did Vaseline. All right. And number four, finally, is your
earwax is going to trap some dead skin and hair cells and basically all of that junk to carry it
back out to keep it clean. So it sounds sort of counterintuitive to trap that stuff, but it's
trapping it so it can carry it out. And if you didn't have the earwax, it would just go in there.
Right. And if you chew things like celery and you talk, then the earwax is going to work its way
out in a slow process where all this stuff is cleaned out and you don't ever have to do anything
with it under ideal circumstances. Not always are circumstances ideal. And we'll talk about
how things can go wrong after this.
This I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll
be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that,
Michael, and a different hot, sexy teen crush boyband or each week to guide you through life
step by step. Not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be
thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever
you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology.
But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might
not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the
universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there
is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove
in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show
about astrology, my whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to
father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, Chuck. So ideally, you don't have to ever
think about earwax or anything like that, except to brush it off your shoulder, right?
Sure. But for some people, earwax can build up and become impacted. A lot of times,
it's because people mess with it, like with cotton swabs on a stick. You may have seen
the advertisement on the big game. I think they're just called cotton swabs. Right, yeah, okay.
So if you use that, a lot of people use those to clear out their earwax, right?
Yeah, you're not supposed to. No, it's doing the exact opposite. Because your earwax is created
and moves from the outside third of your inner ear. When you rub cotton swab on it,
you're actually pushing it in further than it's supposed to be. And it can't get out as easily
there. So what you're going to do eventually is have earwax build up. Yeah, and it's so hard to
get people to not do that because it's so rewarding when you get out of the shower and use that swab
and you get that orange gunk and you're like, oh man, I'm so glad that's out of my body.
But it's got a purpose. Leave it there. You're supposed to leave it there.
Plus, I mean, using cotton swabs can lead to other kinds of dangers, like you can push too hard
and perforate your eardrum. Sure. I think it really is true. You're not supposed to put anything
larger than the end of a football in your ear. You can also clean it too much. Yeah.
It can result in something called swimmers ear, where basically for people who spend a lot of
time in the pool, their ears are constantly irrigated. Yeah. And the canal becomes basically
free of earwax. And as a result, bad things can happen. Yeah. And they say if you do have
swimmers ear, put a few drops of a slightly acidic, not acid, like hydrochloric acid.
Okay. Just put a 55-gallon drum of hydrochloric acid in there. What is a slightly acidic fluid,
I wonder? Maybe lemon juice? That's what I would guess. That's probably what I would do.
I hope we're not advising something that's really dangerous. No. As a matter of fact,
maybe you should go look up what you should put in there or go to your doctor. Yes, but they advise
some slightly acidic fluid in the ear after you swim and that reestablishes what should be a normal
acidic environment. Yeah, because when you strip out that earwax, you lose those big four benefits
and all of a sudden your ear is dry and cracky and you've got fungus and bacteria growing in there
and you get ear infections and it's not fun. The big four. Back to creating a build-up of earwax,
you get what's called serum and impaction. And that is when you have a bunch of earwax
pressed against your ear drum and it can result in all sorts of stuff like headaches, nausea,
ear aches, coughing for some reason and that can be from using Q-tips. People who use hearing aids
run into this a lot and when your serum becomes impacted, you have to go to the doctor. That's
right. Which my sweet wife had to go to the doctor when she was a little girl because she got earwax
impaction and she said it sucked. Well, when you go to the doctor, if it comes to that,
they're going to have quite a few techniques they could use. Ear syringing is one of them.
It sounds painful. It does. I don't think it is though. I bet it's actually quite a relief.
Yeah, that's not how I hear it. Oh, really? Is it painful? Yeah, Yumi says it really is not fun.
Well, I didn't know if that was like a five-year-old Yumi. Well, yeah. But even as an adult,
she remembers it as not being very fun. Is this Paddington, Yumi? Maybe that's why she had such
a reaction. Maybe. They'll use other instruments. Sometimes you use a microphone or I'm sorry,
a microscope. That'd be weird to magnify the ear canal. They shout into it to shatter your earwax.
And some people have a more narrow ear canal. Yeah. Or if you have a perforated
eardrum or something, that can be a problem. Basically, you want to go to a doctor. You
could try some home methods like peroxide or maybe mineral oil. Yeah, apparently warm mineral
oil kind of breaks it up a little bit. Yeah. That's one of my most pleasing memories as a kid
when I had earaches. My mom would like heat up mineral oil and put it in my ear. But that was
nice. It felt really nice. It's very warm. And for some reason, I like the feeling of water
closing my ear like when I get in a pool. Oh yeah, probably because of that. Yeah, maybe so.
I didn't think about that. Do you like that or is it what? I was just imagine you just like
crawling to the fetal position. Why is Chuck just floating in the pool like a baby?
No, I've never had much of an affinity for water in my ears. Because some people hate it.
I don't hate it. I don't like it. Yeah. And like, you know, I'll bang on the side of my head if it
feels like there's like a drop of water in there. Does that work? It can. Not always. I think
normally the water just has to dry. Right. You know, sometimes I get dizzy in my head. It hurts.
I used to see when I lifeguarded, I would see swim team members do that though. And
I was always like, I don't know if that just doesn't seem right. Once in a while it does. Yeah.
And it just goes and all of a sudden you can hear normally again. Interesting. I didn't see the
reason for this though, but they did in this one article I saw have cautioned people against ear
irrigation if you had diabetes. What? Yeah. Why? I have no idea. I meant to follow up on that.
So we don't know what drugs cause an increase in ear wax buildup and we don't know why if you have
diabetes, you shouldn't do ear canal irrigation. I don't know. They said not to use irrigation
if you have a perforated ear drum. Yeah, I get that. A tube in the ear drum. A weekend immune
system or diabetes. I have no idea. Not to follow up on social media and let people know. Okay.
But they do say if you do want to clean your ear, it's not like you can't clean your ears, but
just wash your external ear with a cloth, but you should never stick something into your ear
canal. Right. It's just no good, but it's interesting that the cotton swab business is huge.
I mean, they've made a, if you think about it, they've made, I don't want to say it's,
they shouldn't be selling these things. No, I know what you mean though. Yeah, apparently
that I couldn't find out how much people spend on cotton swabs every year or how many are produced.
Couldn't find out that either. But for 2011, apparently Americans spent $63 million on ear
cleaning stuff, home ear cleaning stuff. And I imagine a lot of that went to cotton swabs,
but also like home irrigation kits and stuff like that. Yeah. Cause you can get those at the drug
store, right? Right. And those are fine. I guess. Yeah. I don't know. I mean, everything is upside
down right now. No, I think the irrigation is fine if you don't fall into one of those categories
that I mentioned is because you're not sticking an object into your ear. That, and then if you
don't do it too frequently to where you're stripping the earwax out of your ear. Right.
Cause it's not like that thing just replenishes overnight guys. I know. And you know, I used
the cotton swabs, not a lot, but occasionally, but I'm not going to do it anymore. But it,
it is, like I said, it's, it feels so good to get a big hunk of that stuff out. Yeah. I've never
been into those. Yeah. I'm just, I'm not going to do it anymore. I'm going to tell them only to,
I'm going to burn all that stuff. All I do is I take some soap and lather up my hands,
do the outside of my ears. And then like, I, I guess I just kind of follow the contours
of the inside of my ears. And I'm trying to remember, like, do I go into my ear canals? And
I think I intuitively stop with your fingers. Yeah. And about the outside. So I don't really
go into the ear canal and then rinse it out and get off and get out of the shower. And then now I,
I, I, I moisturize my ears afterward is the last step. That's great. The other thing too,
that they, of course you should never, ever do, like cotton swabs is one thing, but like a car key.
Yeah. Or bobby pin or like a toothpick. What is wrong with you? I don't know. You should never,
ever stick something like that in your ear because you're just asking for trouble. Big trouble.
All right. Well, after this break, we are going to talk about ear candling.
You've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This I promise you. Oh God.
Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man.
And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a different hot,
sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life.
Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure
to listen. So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology,
but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might
not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if
the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention because maybe there
is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in
and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled
marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about
astrology, my whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcast, wherever you get your podcasts. All right, so Chuck, you teased everybody with
ear candling. Why don't you tell everyone what that is? It's hokum. Okay, describe the hokum.
Well, ear candling, and a lot of people don't know this, I think. I think a lot of folks say,
like, oh my gosh, it's the best thing ever. It is also known as auricular candling or coning.
And it is a procedure when you put a cone-shaped, waxy cone-shaped device in the ear canal,
and it's usually like a plate underneath it between the cone and your ear. And you light it
on fire, and supposedly what it does is it... You stick the thing in your ear and then light it
on fire. Supposedly what it does is it creates a vacuum to pull out impurities. Right, because the
flame supposedly needs oxygen. Well, the flame definitely needs oxygen to burn, and it's getting
its oxygen by sucking it out of the ear canal through the cone, hence creating a vacuum. And as
it does, like you said, it sucks out impurities in the ear wax and supposedly also clears your
sinuses, clears the plaque out of your dendrites, and all sorts of stuff like that. Yeah, this one
article by Lisa Rosen, MD, said she went to, and this is in the 90s, but she went to a discovery
expo in Atlanta and said that they had ear candlers there in one of the exhibitions, and the lady
said that ran the booth, quote, it cleans the whole head, brains and all. They're all connected,
you know? Is that quote in there? Oh yeah, end quote, and of course it was in Atlanta, I'm like,
oh great, although that doesn't necessarily mean... That could be anywhere. Yeah, you're right, sure.
But there are a lot of people that think it's a cleanse for your ear, and it does connect
to your brain, and it clears your head, and it's a spiritual thing, and they don't know
where exactly it came from, but China and ancient Tibet and pre-Columbian South America.
Atlantis. Yeah, they all are cited as places where it might have happened. Yeah, no one has
any idea where this stuff originated. It could have been created in the US in the 70s, for all
anybody knows. Should we read some of the things that supposedly helps? Yeah, we should probably
also say if you haven't been able to tell by now, science is thoroughly debunked ear candling.
That's right. And this is from that article that Dr. Rosen and some of her colleagues got
together and kind of step by step took down the idea. Yeah, there's a list of like 40 things,
we won't go through them all, but release vertigo, clears the eyes, purifies the blood,
aids sinusitis, relieves ear aches, opens and aligns your chakra, releases blocked energy,
reduces stress and tension, stabilizes your emotions. It does none of that because
it has just been proven to be an outright, not only fraud, but dangerous.
Right, so and here's why. So the first one is that you can't pass liquids and gases through
an eardrum that isn't perforated or ruptured. So it's not sucking anything out of your inner ear,
or your lymph system, or your sinuses, or your brain. That's why your ears pop when you're in a
plane. If you could pass air through there, that wouldn't happen. There would be no atmospheric
pressure going on. Right, so that means that sticking a ear candle in your outer ear is not
going to suck anything out because it can't pass through. That's point one, right? That's point one.
Point two is oxygen will create that vacuum and suck out the impurities. Yeah, and that is just
not true. Yeah, apparently, and yeah, doing trials of ear candles, they weren't able to
create a vacuum in any of them, so there's no vacuum created. That's right. There's also
the idea that if a vacuum were created, it would suck impurities out. Apparently after ear
candling, some of these, at least one of the same trials, studied the stuff, the residue,
that was found afterward, like I guess in the stump of the ear candle. Well yeah, and that's
what people point to because there's all this gunk and they're like, look at all this stuff that
came out of my ear. Oh my god. Right, so what it turns out to be is ash from the ear candle and
leftover wax from the ear candle, but not... It's just the ear candle. Not ear wax, just the candle
residue. Yeah, like they tested the substance. It is not cerebrum in any form or fashion.
What about the idea that it's safe and effective? I think we took care of the effective part. Yeah.
But the safe thing, apparently there's a lot of injuries you can get from it. You can be burned
is one thing. Sure. You can perforate your eardrum. You can get infections. You can get
buildup of the candle wax to replace whatever wax you think you're getting out. Yeah, it could
have the reverse effect. Exactly, and then one woman actually died from a fire that was caused
in 2005 from ear candling. I looked it up. She was doing it, I guess, by herself on her bed
and the ear candle fell out of her ear and caught her bedsheets on fire, and she made it out of
her house fine, but she was asthmatic and had an asthmatic reaction to the smoke and died.
How did it happen that fast? I don't know. I guess she had some 1940s like bedsheets or something.
Oh, right. They were made out of like some flammable material. There is a company, I won't
name the company, but one company that made it. It came with a 75-page manual and a 30-minute
videotape. I guess this was a while ago. It was a videotape. Candles and plate guards and flame
retardant cloths and oil and an otoscope. If you read the flyer with this kit, it says,
quote, it supplies you with everything you need for a safe and effective session of entertainment.
Right. For entertainment purposes only. Yeah. Because apparently, I think it says
that Canada regulates those things or the U.S. does is medical devices if they make any health
claims. Yeah, I think they're illegal in Canada outright. Gotcha. Or at least they were. I'm not
sure if they still are, but yeah, the FDA won't even, I mean, you can't make any kind of claim
on the box. If you get an ear candle at your little health food store, just read it carefully.
They can't make any claims. For entertainment purposes only. Because it's a hoot to put a
candle in your ear and light it on fire. There was one other thing I came across in the articles
you sent me, and I don't know if it's true, but it sounds fantastic, that if you could create
a vacuum with an ear candle, the negative pressure created by the vacuum would rupture your ear
drum, which sounds pretty awesome. Yeah. I don't know if it's true. It wasn't backed up with a
source or anything like that. I couldn't find it anywhere else, but it's pretty hilarious.
Yeah. So don't ear candle people. And if you write in and say, no, you should see the stuff that
comes out, it is not your earwax. Yeah, you should put that stuff beneath a gas chromatograph and
see what you think. I mean, it's proven. This is like, what was we talked about recently?
Crop circles. Oh, yeah, we got heat from that too. People are like, no, it's not proven.
What was it? I think it was that. Okay. The lowest crop circles, when we're like, no,
they've proven that these guys came out and said we made it up. No, I know what they were saying,
though. It's just like we were talking about with ESPs, because you can disprove. Right, right.
Some of it doesn't mean that disproves all of it, except with crop circles.
We should come up with the stuff you should know, T-shirt friends, don't let friends ear candle.
That's a good one. Yeah. Yeah, just love your earwax. Yeah, let it fall out on your shoulder
and let someone point it out and you say, that's nature, baby. Yeah. It's because they eat celery.
Yeah. If you want to know more about earwax, you can type the word into the search bar at
howstuffworks.com. I think we have it done as one word, maybe. Yeah. I said search bar,
which means it's time for Listener Mail. I'm going to call this ice cream follow-up. We got a lot
of good stuff on ice cream. Yeah, we did. People really liked that episode. Hey guys, I'm a student
University of Minnesota Twin Cities. Started listening to your podcast just this week,
and I'm officially hooked. I'm listening to your podcast on ice cream, which is really interesting,
because I've worked in ice cream parlor for the last five summers. Wilson's opened in 1906 and
is still going strong today, one of the most famous restaurants in Wisconsin. There are definitely
different types of vanilla ice cream. Yeah. We use two types, French or deluxe vanilla and purple
vanilla. The label on this other vanilla is purple. We use purple vanilla for shakes and malts because
it's less rich, allows for the flavor of the shaker malt to be more distinguished. We serve
French vanilla and ice cream cone Sundays in floats. And you mentioned having root beer floats
reminded me of an interesting thing that I've noticed. People often get offended when they order a
black cow, and we have to ask them what it is. That's because almost everyone has a different
idea of what a black cow consists of. Some say that it's a root beer float. Some say that it's
a root beer float with chocolate ice cream. Some say it's a Coke float. Some say it's a blended
root beer float, et cetera, et cetera. Somehow they all got labeled as black cow. Thanks for giving
me more ice cream knowledge. I'll actually be able to answer customers now when they ask what
the difference between ice cream and frozen yogurt is. That is from Andrea Nelson, and she says PS,
those nasty cheap cones with the flat bottoms are known as cake cones. Yeah, I saw that afterward.
Don't order them ever. I mean, if you're at Jason's Deli and that's all they got.
Oh, they have the free ice cream, right? Yeah. That was the day that we recorded
ice cream, and I couldn't remember the name of the cone. I think I ended up going that night.
There it was, cake cone. I was like, yes, cake cone. Somebody else called it a wafer cone,
but I think that's just wrong. I see where that would come from because it's wafer-esque.
Yeah. I mean, it makes sense, but I've never seen it called that before.
And that's too close to waffle cone. Right. It makes people confused.
So thanks, Andrea Nelson, for that one. Thanks, Andrea. If you want to get in touch with us to
say hi or to tell us about ice cream or anything like that, you can tweet to us at SYSK podcast.
You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know. You can send us an email to
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the luxurious stuffyoushouldknow.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeart Radio. For more podcasts from iHeart Radio,
visit the iHeart Radio app. Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye,
bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular, and it turns out astrology is way
more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, international
banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about
to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.