Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Mermaids: Not a real thing
Episode Date: March 6, 2021Mermaids aren't real. That much we know. But the history and lore of these magical and sometimes menacing creatures of the sea is pretty interesting stuff. Learn all about these half women/half fish i...n 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.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple 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 podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everybody and welcome to Saturday. Yesterday was Friday, tomorrow is Sunday,
today is Saturday. This is Chuck. Today's episode is Mermaids, Not a Real Thing.
This is from August 4, 2016. And I gotta say, I just remember thinking this was kind of an
interesting podcast and that's why I picked it for Saturday. Enjoy everybody.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. Yeah, that's right. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
Jerry's over there in the ether, floating, possibly not existing, who knows.
And this is Stuff You Should Know. That's right. Just a couple of Mermen trying to make their way
in the world. Yeah. Trying to keep their tails wet. Yeah. You know? Yeah. Because if that thing
dries out, you've seen Splash. Yeah, it's a toast. No, she dried out and she was just fine.
Oh, I thought, oh, you're thinking of ET when he turned all white and dried out.
Now, I was thinking of Splash because I couldn't remember. It was one of my favorite movies as a
kid. It was a cute movie. It was one of those early HBO movies, early Tom Hanks, which I'm a big fan
of early Tom Hanks. And I just thought it was a really fun, funny movie, John Candy. Yeah,
it was a great movie. What's his name played the evil man trying to expose her? Eugene Levy, I think.
Oh, was he the bad guy? Yeah, he was the one that... You know that's a high-quality movie
when Eugene Levy's the bad guy. Yeah, that was the SETV crew. And he actually tried to spray
her and get her wet so she would... Oh, it was a... And in fact, did turn into a mermaid on the sidewalk.
So that's what it was. She got wet, she turned into a mermaid. Right. She got dried, no problem.
Yes. And Daryl Hannah, of course, who's running around with Neil Young now.
Oh, really? Yeah. How about that couple? Sure. Why not? They're both environmentalists.
But there's a lot of turquoise in that bedroom. I wonder if you hook up with Neil Young or anyone
like that if you're sort of a new relationship and not like the wife they had for 40 years.
If you're like, play a song, why don't you? What? Like, I wonder if you ask them to play music.
Oh, like, you're actually into them? Yeah. Like, if you're Billy Joel's new 25-year-old
wife, do you ever say like, hey, honey, play me a tune? Right. Play that one that you wrote
10 years before I was conceived. I think I'm saying is I would have a hard time being with Neil Young
and not every night after dinner, just kind of nudging the guitar toward him. Oh, I got you.
And saying, I'd love to hear Old Man. Yeah. Please, baby, one for me. And yeah, he says
I've played that song 45,000 times. Yeah, I would guess that, well, I can tell you, I would guess
that once you reach a certain point in playing a song, you never want to hear that song or even
think about it existing again. Yeah. But then you still have to play it. Oh, I try not to think
about that when I'm at those shows. Yeah, it makes me feel bad for them. Like, they might as well be,
you know, in the monkey house or something. Yeah. You just throw them bananas at them.
And God bless the people who really bring it still. Sure. Where you feel like, man,
they're playing that song for me tonight. At a man. Does he still bring it?
He's just who came to mind. Whereas when I saw the police on their reunion, they were
phoning it in. Really? Yeah. Even Stuart Copeland? Well, I mean, they were playing the songs, but it just,
it didn't look like they were enjoying themselves at all. It looked like a total
money grab. Sure. They entered from three separate entrances and exited from three separate. Oh,
yeah. And I got the feeling they didn't even like speak much. That's like, I was reading an article
on the Ramones. The Rolling Stone one recently? Yeah, I guess it was. Yeah, they had a great
article on them. So yeah, I guess it was, it was definitely Rolling Stone. So, okay, did you read
it? Yeah. Then? It was awesome. But yeah, they, like they, they would, they would just like get on
the bus and not speak to one another. Yeah. Go to the next town and get on stage and play and then
come off stage and not speak. Like they would, they would speak on stage because they had to.
Yeah. That was it. And apparently, well, at least Joey and who was his big foil? Dee, DeeDee.
Those ones who really hated each other? Yeah. Supposedly they didn't speak at all for like
25 years straight. Right. Because Joey stole DeeDee's like love of his life. Right. And then
they were in the band together still after that. It was just like T.S., man. So weird. So like a lot
of songs, especially ones like the KKK took my baby away. That's about Joey stealing DeeDee's
girlfriend. Wow. This is a great article. Yeah. Good read. Yeah. So back to Splash. Funny movie
about a mermaid. And we're going to talk about mermaids here. And mostly what we're going to cover
is the lore and history and the mythology of the mermaid because there's a little giveaway.
There are no mermaids. What? Did you look up like pictures of real mermaid sightings and stuff?
Yeah. And it's the same thing as pictures of bigfoot sightings and pictures of UFO sightings.
Some weird distant blur that like you can't, it could be kelp. Or it's such an obviously
doctored photo. What? Yeah. What would be fun though is if we had a time machine,
forget Killing Hitler. We do. Forget like... Way back machine. Oh yeah, that's right. I can't
believe William put this into good use. Yeah. Forget like, you know, saving the world or keeping
the dodo from going extinct. I would take some of these doctored photos that are just so easy to
make today back to like the 1920s and be like, look at this. And they go, yeah, I know. We still
believe in that stuff. With your aim being what? Just to freak them out. Oh, I figured there'd be
a money angle. Oh yeah. Josh is traveling wonder, wonder emporium. That's not a bad idea. We're
wearing witchy to show them photos. But I charge them like 2016 rates and no one can possibly
afford that. So I go out of business like almost immediately. Right. There's like one guy in the
town that's like, I'll pay $27.50 to see those. Step right up. Town's only billionaire. That's a
great idea. I don't know why no one ever thought of that. It was a terrible idea like from beginning
to end. Forget going back and betting on the stock market or the outcome of the World Series.
I'm going to go back and set up a business doomed to fail. All right. So let's talk about Mermaid
lore. Well, we can start here in the more modern age because there are still places that try and
take people for money like we were just talking about even. Yeah, like me. In fact, in Israel,
on the coast there, they actually have a town called Kiryat Yom. It's a great name. If you go
to Kiryat Yom, you could win how much money? Does he even say? Million bucks. Million American
dollars if you... If you provide incontrovertible evidence of the mermaid that is reputed to
live there and appear at sunset as of 2009 was the first sighting there. Yeah. And of course,
what that is is a ploy to try and get tourists and come and spend money in the town and look for
the mermaid. Sure. Come on chumps. We welcome you to Kiryat Yom. I'm sure Loch Ness has made
plenty of tourist money over the years. Apparently they have a standing offer as well and that's
where the mayor of Kiryat Yom got the idea. Yeah, great idea. Sure. And actually, I saw that photo
too and it's kind of neat. I don't know what it is or who created it or whatever, but there's
allegedly a photo taken obviously from like a cliff down onto a beach. You know a beach that
will have like a big just slab of rocks surrounded by sand? Yeah, sand and mermaids. Right. There's
a mermaid on that rock just kind of looking out at the sea. Yeah. And of course, it could be
anything. It could be totally doctored, who knows. But it's from a distance and at least they didn't
like go full out like perfect picture of a mermaid or whatever. It's just suggestive enough that
people who believe in such things would be like they're right there. There's a picture of a mermaid,
you know? Totally. So that was found in 2009 or that surfaced in 2009 and since then the town...
Surfaced? Right. Since then the towns had that standing offer.
Correct. So the really interesting thing to me about mermaids is the mythology. Did you
take mythology in college at all? Yeah, I did. I always wanted it to interest me more than it did.
Me too. It was just, I don't know if it wasn't explained to me quite well enough or just the
ancients non bicameral mind wasn't fused together enough to interest people in the modern age.
Well, I think so. I think the stories themselves, as far as good storytelling or just lacking,
because a lot of them were just versions of one another and there was usually a very basic
premise or moral. Right. In the case of mermaids, a lot of times a lot of folklore even was rooted
in misogyny. Oh yeah, for sure. There'll be a woman to come along and screw your life up.
Right. Or if you screw up a woman, she will kill your children or something like that.
Like women were not to be trusted and they were murderous and duplicitous in a lot of mythology.
It's true. The old hag. So it was in various, I mean, hundreds and hundreds of books and text,
including the Talmud, believe it or not. And we've talked about Pliny the Elder,
the beer and the dude. Yeah. Rome's Pliny the Elder. He, in his natural history,
talked about a mermaid-like creature called... The Nereid. Yes. I think I'm pronouncing that
correctly. Yeah, N-E-R-E-I-D. That E-I is a tough transition. It is. Because you want to say like
Nereid. Yeah. Nereid. These were sea nymphs, half human, half fish mermaids. And he also talked
about sea men. And we should point out that mermen, we made the joke about us being mermen.
Yeah. I believe mermen were even first on the literary scene. Is that correct? Well,
first at least with mythology or theology, I guess, there's a Babylonian god of the sea named
Ea. Yeah. Ea, sports. Just Ea. And he pops up in Babylonian mythology from, I think, 4,000 years ago.
And they think that he's actually the pregenitor of, or the predecessor, I should say, of Poseidon,
who is the Greek god of the sea, and Neptune, who's the Roman god of the sea. Because the Greeks
gave us Western culture, but they just walked around to all of the neighboring cultures and
picked their favorite parts and put them together. Yeah. And that was definitely one of them. Yeah,
for sure. Yeah. Yeah. Well, we talked in our, I guess it was in the folklore and fairy tale
episodes. There were twin episodes almost about the original little mermaid and how
she was Disney-fied to the fullest. But the original story was far darker. Darker, but also
even more touching by far. Yeah. Like I went back and read the last section of it. Well,
give me a summary at the end. So at the end, this is where it dramatically differs from the Disney
story. The little mermaid is scorned for another woman. Her, the guy she loves, chooses someone
else and marries her. And the little mermaid is like, dude, I gave up my tail for you. Yeah. I
think a witch has my tongue kind of thing. And I want to get back my life. So her sisters came
and bring her this ritual knife and say, you can convert back to a mermaid if before dawn,
you plunge this knife into this dude's heart, this guy who loves heart and you get some of
his blood on your feet, you will regrow your tail and you can jump into the sea and everything
will be just fine again. So she goes and she finds the guy sleeping with his new bride beside him
and she just can't do it. She throws the knife into the sea and becomes sea foam. She disintegrates
and becomes sea foam. So she gives her, her own happiness up for this guys, right? And dies as
a result. But even better than that, when she turns into sea foam, she becomes a different
mythical creature, like basically an air nymph that goes around like helping humans. And she
can possibly get into heaven if she helps people for 300 years. Hans Christian Anderson wrote it
way better than I just recounted it, a lot less ohms and likes. But it's pretty, it's worth reading.
Pliny also talked about merman back in the day and there would be merman or seaman who would
at night climb upon to ships, there's a quote, that's why I'm reading it weird, upon which the
side of the vessel where he seated himself would instantly sink downward. And if you remain there
any considerable time, even go underwater. And that was something that we will see as we talk
more about mermaids is they are very, they're often either an omen, that's something bad is
going to happen to sailors or coastal dwelling people. Yeah. Or they actually directly cause harm
to sailors or coastal dwelling people. Yeah. And most times under the guise of something
beautiful and like a siren, they're often, well, I don't, we haven't even described one,
surely you know that a mermaid has the head and body torso of a woman, human woman.
Usually with huge boobs. Yeah, if you're talking about a sailor's account. Right. Sure.
You're like, oh yeah, she was busty. Did I mention the boobs? Yes, you did sir, seven times.
And the, from the, you know, torso down, she's a fish, maybe web feet, maybe not,
very graceful, very fast and always beautiful. It depends. Oh yeah? Yeah, there was some of
legend that were not ugly. Really? Yeah. Not ugly or they were ugly. That they were not
in parentheses, beautiful, comma, ugly. Well, I hadn't heard about that.
Yeah, it's in here. I thought, no, I'm just, I must have missed that part. It's far more
frequent when you were saying that they were beautiful and alluring. Okay. But we'll talk
more about that after we take a break, huh?
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do,
you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh God.
Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man.
And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yep, we know that Michael and a different hot,
sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one.
Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life.
Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure
to listen. So we'll never ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. 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,
kpop. But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing 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.
All right, Chuck. We were saying that for the most part,
mermaids are beautiful. And one of the reasons why they are supposed to be beautiful is because
they are frequently accused of luring men, sailors out to sea, to their death. Yeah. And
how do you do that? You do that one of two ways. You have a beautiful singing voice. Yep. Or you
just straight up look good yourself. That's right. And if you have a beautiful singing voice,
you're a siren, in which case you would not be a mermaid because a siren is half bird, half woman.
Yes. And they don't even necessarily live in the water or near the water. They're sometimes
described as hanging out in fields. Yeah. I guess sometimes you can be very pretty and be a good
singer. Right? You're a mermaid. But the, yeah, it could be. Yeah. Sure. Who am I to disagree?
You'd be Beyonce. Right. Or Alicia Keys. Right. Or Adele. Oh, you know who I like is Rihanna.
Oh, yeah. She's great. Man. She's very pretty. That part in, what's it called? This is the end?
And she played herself? Yeah, yeah. She was pretty great in that. She was pretty funny.
Michael Cera likes banter and she just immediately turned around and smacked the heck out of them.
Yeah. I enjoyed parts of that movie, especially Michael Cera. Yeah. Playing like a cooked out
jerk. That was really funny. Yeah. So back to the beautiful mermaids though. There was one in
1000 BCE in Syria and her name, how would you pronounce that? Aturgatus. Oh, I think you nailed
it. Yeah. Yeah. All right, we'll go with that. And you'll see a lot of duality in a lot of these
stories. And she was one for sure that was a protector, a goddess. I think she protected the
fertility of her people and watched over them and fell in love with a human man, as you will often
see in a lot of these stories. A dude. Yeah, a dude. And it was fine for a little while,
like in most stories. And then it goes south. Yeah. And she kills him. She crushed him with her
greatness. Oh, I thought like her big tail or something. I don't know. Well, she wasn't a
mermaid yet. This is where she becomes a mermaid. Oh, that's true. That's right. I forgot about that.
So she accidentally kills him and then is very shamed, throws herself into the lake
because she wants to become a fish. And she's so beautiful that it only works half as good.
I really can't figure out the math on that. No. But I guess she's just so beautiful that the human
beauty part of her is like, no, I won't be a fish. Just the lower half can be a fish. Yeah.
Because she had toe fungus. So that was easily overcome. But her face was really nice. So
the fish part just couldn't overcome that. That's right. So she ended up a mermaid.
Weird story. Well, not just weird like, oh, it's foreign or anything. I'm not being xenophobic,
but it really says a lot about humanity and how we think of things. No, she was so good looking
that this magic couldn't even overcome that. Yeah. You know? We place a lot of value on that kind
of thing. All right. Should we move on to Germany? Yeah, this one was kind of interesting to me
because Germany's landlocked. Oh, I never really thought about that. What does Germany have a
mermaid mythology? Well, I mean, they have lakes. I guess. But mermaids are 100% ocean dwellers,
aren't they? No, there are some river dwellers. Oh, that's right. Although I think the sirens
were specifically river. Well, in the German myth, it was a river dweller, correct? Okay. Yeah,
the Nix's? Yeah. And they lured men into the river. Yeah, it was a river. And so they could drown
them. Like, again, the call of the siren coming here. Look how beautiful I am. Right. Check these
out. And now I'm holding your head underwater. Right. And you can't breathe anymore. And the
guy's like, I regret nothing. But this duality that we're talking about is what you see a lot of
times in mermaid myths from West Africa, the mommy water, the mother water. She was a mermaid
who was very nurturing and very loving. If you didn't cross her. Yeah, exactly. That's where
the duality comes in. I don't even know that's duality. I think that's just a complex person.
Good, good complex character there. Yeah. Yeah. So she's great. But when you cross her, she's
murderous. Sure. All right. And that's what she did actually. She had, if you were loyal to her,
she would, you could be wealthy from her magic mirror and comb. But if you betrayed her, then
what this article says is she rains down fury and destruction. Right. Right out of the age word
from above. But the duality is an important part of it because the physical creature itself
is two things. Sure. And they are also two things emotionally and. But so the mermaid,
the mermaid or merman or merfolk as they're called in this article. Are they really? Yeah.
So merfolk are half fish, half people, right? Yeah. But they're not anywhere near unique
in the pantheon of mythological creatures throughout the ages, right? There's again,
there's sirens, half birds, half women. There's just tons of, like the minotaur,
half man, half bull. Yeah. The centaur was what, half goat or horse and half man?
I don't remember that sounds right. I think half horse.
And I was like, where did all these come from? I suspect a bestiality and it turns out I may
be right. Oh yeah? Yeah. What'd you find? There are some scholars out there who believe that
this is the product of a much more relaxed attitude toward bestiality than we modern
humans have today. Yeah. Yeah. I still never saw that documentary about the horse.
Yeah. It's a good one. Zoo. Yeah. I need that fell off my radar. Man, it's one of those ones
where they largely do recreate, like the whole thing's almost recreation. Right. And I usually
am not hip on those. It doesn't feel like a documentary to me, but that one changed my
mind about that whole technique. They did it so well. Really? Yep. It's rough. I bet. It's rough,
especially like when you think about, you know, the animals as well. Yeah, of course. You know,
but there's more than just that that makes it rough. Man, I need to see that. So I guess we can
talk a little bit about some eyewitness accounts. They're all bunk, of course, but they have happened
in World War Two in Japan on Indonesia's Kai Islands. Supposedly they encountered a monster
on the beach that had, you know, webbed hands and feet and was kind of part human, part fish.
Yeah. It was like, look at these jazz hands. You can't do this. And then back in the day,
some of our most revered explorers and adventurers reported seeing mermaids
like John Smith and Henry Hunson. And Columbus. John Smith. Everybody loves him. Yeah, what was,
there's a good quote in here from Columbus because he wasn't too impressed. Yeah. He said,
and here's the thing. I read that in his diary, he's referring to himself in the third person.
Well, that says a lot. That's odd. Ricky Henderson. Right. Or George Costanza.
So he says that he saw some, oh yeah, the quote's not in here. You got to read the quote.
He's sailing around. Oh, what is that out in the ocean? I think I'll take a look through
my spying glass. The day before when the admiral was going to the, and the admiral is himself.
Yeah. That's what I'm thinking. He was the admiral of his fleet for sure. The day before
when the admiral was going on to the Rio del Oro. That's the river of gold. He said he saw three
mermaids who came quite high out of the water, but were not as pretty as they are depicted.
For somehow in the face, they look like men. But I still thought about it. Yeah. So.
And see. What they think now, and I don't know how they substantiated this, is that
Columbus was seeing manatees. Yeah. Have you seen manatees? Yeah. It looks nothing like a human.
From enough of a distance though, you're like, wait a minute, what is that? Especially if you've
never seen a manatee before. I don't think it looks human like at all. From enough of a distance.
Yeah. I can see how somebody would, especially if you believe that mermaids existed. You see
a manatee? Maybe it's hard for me to go there and put my mind in that kind of frame. In the
frame of Christopher Columbus? Well, just to have never seen a mermaid, to have never seen a manatee
to be high on, what's the green stuff? Arrowwax scalps. Oh my God. I just blanked on the green.
Marijuana? No. The green. The green drink, absinthe. I don't think absinthe was around with
Columbus. Oh, you kidding me? No, I'm not. You're shooting that stuff. I can kind of see it.
So he maybe saw a manatee. He was like, eh, they're not so great looking after all.
They're not that great. What's everyone talking about?
Yeah, he saw one. This is like Jimmy Carter in the UFOs. Like you're kind of surprised when you
hear this that somebody cited it. Apparently Reagan said he saw UFOs as well. John Smith
said he saw some. He liked what he saw. He liked the look of the manatees because he said he fell
in love with one with long green hair. Yeah. He said it wasn't bad looking or it wasn't unattractive
or something like that. Yeah. He hedged his bets a little bit. Yeah. I guess he wanted to check
the rest of her out. Yeah. And then he saw she had a tail and he's like, oh, can't go there.
So what's going on here? Are they hallucinating because they've been on the high seas too long?
That's what a lot of people say. Yeah. Other people say that, again, they were predisposed
to believing in mermaids because people thought mermaids existed. This was the age of exploration.
So it's the beginning of the age of exploration, which means that before then, the oceans were
largely unexplored and there were tons of beliefs in thousands of year old mythologies about creatures
that lived in the sea. So if you thought that those things existed, then something that looked
kind of like a mermaid could be a mermaid. So that was probably, they were just cases
of mistaken identity. They were highly suggestible. Yeah. We did one on Sea Monsters, remember?
We did. Yeah. That was a good one. I thought that one was going to be awful and it turned out pretty
great. That episode? Yeah. I remember thinking like, this is not going to go well. Kind of like
this one. Yeah. How do you think this one's going? Pretty great. All right. Well, let's take a break
then and give each other a neck rub. Okay. And we'll come back more comfortable than ever. All right.
Who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay. I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously. I swear. And you won't have to send
an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me.
Yep. We know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide
you through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids relationships life in general can get
messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never ever have to say
bye, bye, bye. Listen to frosted tips with Lance Bass on the I heart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikulur. 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 a handle on this sweet
and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing 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.
There is a dude. I love this guy. His name is Carl Bantz.
You're not a Carl Bantz fan? Well, I'm not quite sure I understand unless...
Did you read the article? Well, just to set it up.
Okay, so a dude named Carl Bantz back in 1990, he wrote an article in a legitimate journal,
the journal Limnology and Oceanography. And they published it. And it is an entirely tongue-in-cheek
but totally played straight account of the extinct species, Mermaid.
Yeah, he surmises on, for real, where they came from, what their biology was, why they left us.
Yep, that they were warm water dwelling, that they ate human flesh, which is why they lured
people to their death. He goes so far as to say that they most likely only produced one or two
offspring at a time because the females of the species had two breasts and that was it.
Okay, sure. This is the thought that this guy put into this article and the fact that
he writes it totally straight and really gives it its due attention. It wasn't that this is
going to be a great idea and just the idea itself is hilarious, so I don't really have to put any
effort into actual execution. He put effort into the execution and he did pretty good.
I'm not knocking him, I guess. I just don't see why this journal would put something like that out
there even. I guess they had a good sense of humor and maybe it was the April Fool's episode.
I was wondering if that was the case too and I forgot to look if it was the April issue.
Perhaps. He did use the words horny skin folds though. Their skin, he theorized, was not smooth
scaled like a regular fish but it had, quote, horny skin folds.
Like an armadillo. Yeah. What's interesting is I saw another account from 1830 in Scotland.
There's a town called Bembecula on the outer Hebrides, which is like the outer islands,
the archipelago. It's an archipelago. That's how you say that, right?
It's your archipelago. Yeah. Either way, there's a town there.
String of islands. Coastal, thank you. The coastal town where in 1830,
the whole town swore they saw a mermaid and tried to grab the mermaid and the mermaid swam away.
So some kid threw a rock at it and hit it in its back and two days later they found it dead on shore
and they felt so bad about it that they. Killed the kid. They buried it. They gave it a funeral
with like a casket and everything and they said that it didn't have scales, that it had
like kind of rough skin instead. Horny skin fold. Yeah, they didn't use that term but this is like
a thing in 1830 in Scotland. Yeah, pretty interesting that when you read the account of it years later.
That's a funny band name, by the way. Horny skin folds. Yeah, nice.
Yeah, that is interesting. Maybe there's something there.
Right. How do you keep the folds of the horny skin fold clean, you know?
I bet like gunk gets trapped in there. Gross. I don't know.
Maybe that's the name of the first single, cleaning the folds.
The other thing that Abance did in his article was explain probably why they're extinct now.
He came to the conclusion that they're extinct. He said they were warm water so they would have
cohabitated or shared their ecosystem with jellyfish and as humans started to fish more and
more of the sea, we upset the ecological balance. Jellyfish populations were allowed to boom which
is the case and they stung the mermaids to death because the mermaids had, they lacked the blubber
that would protect them not just in cold water but from jellyfish stings as well. So they died
out from jellyfish stings. Yeah, because their upper skin was just regular skin. Right. It wasn't
the horny skin folds. Yeah. So it provided no protection. Exactly. That's it. It's worth reading.
Go check it out. It's called mermaids, their biology, culture, and demise. You can find
like the full PDF online. Well, I think we have to address the animal planet snafu.
I don't know if they would call it a snafu. I think they would call it a ratings bonanza.
Yeah, which, what was the other, oh, when we talked about the megalodon, when Discovery Channel aired
a megalodon documentary that appeared by all accounts to be true and was not.
Same thing with mermaids, but they did it twice. They did. They did a sequel because it got,
like you said, huge ratings. And this was a documentary, well, not a documentary. It was a
mockumentary that looked like, did you watch any clips or anything? Of the second one, yeah.
Yeah. I mean, it looked like, you know, a show like a hunting bigfoot crew. It's like, you know,
we got this mermaid. We know where she is and we're down here hunting and the 3000 feet
below the surface. Yeah. And they interviewed a guy that looked like Zach Galifianakis. If only
it would have been Zach Galifianakis, it would have made it much better. But, you know, then it
was when these shows were at the end and small lettering, well, it's probably not to be small,
but at the end of the credits, it's like, this was all made up. These are actors and people still
buy it. If you go online, people are still like arguing over the legitimacy or credentials of
the marine geologist Torsten Schmidt. That's a great name. It is. And people are like, well,
if he were a real scientist, he would have been published elsewhere besides this and he's not
published. And it's like, that's because he's not real. He's made up. Yeah. This is like settled.
Right. They didn't even pretend that it was real. So I don't, I don't know if that's the
case or not. Well, I mean, they said it wasn't on the, at the end of the show. Okay. But they didn't
come out and say everybody, everybody. Oh, well, right. And so actually Noah, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration had to release and they felt they needed to release a statement
after the first one saying like, Hey, mermaids don't exist. No evidence has ever been found.
We're Noah the end. And I bet they'd love that even show. Yeah. Oh my God. Noah's making a statement
about it. Yeah. It's going to be all over the news. Right. And so I guess enough people bought it
and, and bought into it that they were able to release a sequel. And in the sequel, the reason
they released the sequel was because Torsten Schmidt had footage of a webbed hand like smacking the
windshield of his little like underwater sub, two-man sub, and then swimming off. Yeah. And so
they just kept showing that over and over and over again. Yeah, I saw that shot. It was cool.
With Zach Galifianakis. He did look like him, didn't he? A lot. I thought you were going to
say that it was found out when Torsten Schmidt showed up on a episode of Two Broke Girls the next
week. It was like a waiter. Yeah. And a progressive insurance ad. It's like customer number two. Exactly.
There's one other sighting I wanted to mention. This one is second for my favorite after the
Scottish one. Okay. It was in Adam Netherlands. Is it Edam? Sure. Like the cheese? Yeah. Okay.
Two girls were like rowing their boats and found a mermaid and took it home and dressed it up as
a little girl and taught it to live on land, but it remained mute its whole life. Like ET.
But isn't that cute? That is very cute. They're like, you're coming home with us.
Oh, you've got a family? T.S. We got a family too, and it's your new family. And they just made
that story up and told people and it survived. I guess. Interesting. Although they didn't,
they didn't, like they matriculated the mermaid into human society there, but we're talking 1430,
so who knows what was going on? Yeah. They were eating. They probably got their hands on somebody
who was like, who knows? Yeah. And they're like, oh, mermaid. This is a mermaid. Oh, just someone
who had some sort of physical deformation and made them come live with them. Yeah. Just as a girl
for the rest of their life, like Schlitzy or something. Yeah. Like we did in the freak shows.
They would just call them, make up whatever animal they wanted to do. That was another great episode, too. Are you just recounting the good ones while we do this one?
Just to remind people, it gets better. So being a mermaid is an actual job you can get. If you,
back in the day, in the 1940s and 50s, it was a big hit to go to like a sea park and have
mermaid shows. And specifically one in, is it Wiki Wachi Springs? Yeah, Wiki Wachi Springs, Florida,
near Tampa. And it was a booming business back then. They said between half million and a million
tourists every year, including big famous people like Elvis Presley and Don Knotts. Yeah. Those
are the two they mentioned. Those two would trash a place together. Oh, I bet. Don gets into the whiskey.
It's all over. So yeah, it was a huge deal back then. They're still doing it there today, but
it is a real job. You can go, if you're a great swimmer, like you have to know what you're doing.
Oh yeah. Like it seems like, oh yeah, you just put on that tail. But that tail is heavy and awkward.
Well, yeah, plus like swimming with your legs together. Yeah, that's hard. Very difficult.
Yeah, it's not an easy job from what I can tell. Yeah. So apparently once you put, like they look
very graceful swimming around in those things, but you go put one on and get in a pool and see
what happens. Right. And this article, I think Riley points out that the professional mermaids that
you see today are, like this is from years and years and years of practice. Yeah. Like they didn't
just get in the water and they're like, yeah, I'm a natural. Yeah, exactly. It's gotta be really
awkward. Sure. And you also have to know how to hold your breath like a moe. Like a moe? Yeah,
I stopped myself. Yeah, you do. And you have to learn how to swim the mermaid crawl, which is
what they name it. But you know, it's not like regular swimming. Yeah, right. You know, yeah.
And you can make a little dough too. A little bit. It said you can be hired like as a one-off for a
party. What is that like? You go to like a neighborhood pool and everyone gathers around,
like, look at the mermaid and claps out of rhythm. And you're like, what are you guys
wanting me to do? I guess you can do that. But mostly what I've seen are like the shows
in some like sleepy Florida town. Right. Like Gator Farm and... That was the start.
And the wiki wachi mermaids. Or like at resorts or something like that.
Yeah. Back when they used to love that kind of thing. And some of these professional mermaids
apparently use their status as a soapbox for ecology and efforts to keep the oceans clean.
Yeah, that's pretty cool. Yeah. There seems to be a real thread of that running through the
professional mermaid culture. You're like an eco-activist. That's a decent band name too.
Professional mermaid culture. Yeah. This one was rich with bands. Band names.
Horny skin folds. Yeah. If you want to know more about mermaids, you can type that word in the
search bar at howstuffworks.com. And since I said search bar, it's time for listener mail.
Actually, in lieu of listener mail today, we are going to ask you for something because we,
people often say like, how can I help the show? Spreading the word is awesome. We always appreciate
that. But one thing we haven't asked you to do in a long time is go to iTunes and leave a review.
Oh yeah. Because that makes a big difference if there are reviews, even if they're not favorable.
Just be honest. Vote with your conscience. Vote with your conscience. And yeah, go to iTunes,
leave a review for us because just having reviews is a good thing. And tell a friend,
help spread the word. I feel like years go by before we say things like this.
Yeah. Well, I think literally that's the case. Yeah. It's been a long time. So we really appreciate
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send us your jingle. And we can't promise we'll use it, but we probably will. Yeah.
Because they're pretty great. Yeah. So that's all I got. Well, thanks. If you want to get in
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