Stuff You Should Know - SYSK Selects: The 'Satanic Panic' of the 1980s
Episode Date: October 19, 2019In the late 1980s, the United States experienced a "Satanic Panic," leading parents to fear for the safety of their children. But were there any real examples of Satanic ritual abuse? Find out this an...d 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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Slash host on the podcast. Hey, dude, the 90s called David Lacher and Christine Taylor stars of the cult classic show
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We're gonna use hey, dude as our jumping off point
But we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it
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Hello everyone it is Saturday and that means it's time for a Saturday stuff
You should know select episode as you know Josh and I curate these each week
We take turns going back through the archives and picking out some of our favorite episodes and boy
Oh boy that I love this one from January 5th
2016 the satanic panic of the 1980s. We lived through it. We talked about it
It's pretty amazing stuff. Check it out right now
Welcome to stuff. You should know a production of iHeart radios how stuff works
Hey and welcome to the podcast I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and this is stuff. You should hail Satan
Man that would have gotten you locked up a few years ago
Yeah, so I want to go ahead and say that I would like to do one on Satanism
Yeah, for sure the religion misunderstood may include the church of Satan or maybe those are two separate things
And the PM RC
Is that the tipper core
Organization yeah, I just this this brought back a lot of memories because we lived through the satanic panic for sure
And I remember it very distinctly. Yeah, like oh, I can imagine young Baptist. I was afraid right? I can imagine I
Was very scared. I remember like growing up thinking, you know, some of the big kids are sacrificing things in the woods
Yeah, oh, yeah
Which is I mean like that was just part of your normal everyday thing like walking around thinking that was happening
Yep, but it turns out in retrospect. It was all almost entirely made up. Yeah, and there was also and imagine every neighborhood or
Town had this with those off Memorial Drive. That was
Satan house where supposedly devil worshipers. Oh, yes. Yeah. Yeah. Did you have one in your town? Sure? Yeah
Yeah, it's so funny to me to think about that now. They were probably just nice normal people. It's probably some old
Shut-ins
Some old folks elderly folks who just couldn't get out of the house much right they murdered anybody for years
You never notice you never see anyone. Yeah, or it's kind of like kind of dilapidated or run down
Yeah, it's because they're old. Yeah, and we want to issue a big COA here parents. This is
Got some pretty grisly stuff in it. You probably don't want your kids listening to this even though it was all made up
Yeah, but there's some
Detail and some of this. It's I found myself even going. Oh, we have to say that. Yeah, so yeah, just
It's rated R
Maybe even X for content. I'm thinking Chuck. We should put together
The Times America lost its mind sweet. Yeah, include this
The Associative Identity Disorder. Yeah
D-programming cold D-programming Salem witchcraft trials
Mm-hmm McCarthyism McCarthyism, that's right. Yeah, we're gonna do it one of these days. I'll actually put some of these sweets together
Yeah
They exist your mental sweets, right? Okay. Thanks, man for letting me off the hook
But I don't know if you guys have picked up on
It or not, but I keep saying like they never really existed wasn't actually true
It wasn't real this whole idea that we're talking about from the
Roughly the mid 80s. Yeah till about the mid 90s about a 10-year period
America as a whole was gripped by
Again, there's no other way to put it satanic panic. Yeah, this idea that there were cults of Satan worshipers who were
Very widespread more than you would think. Oh, yeah, who were abducting
Killing raping molesting our children mutilating animals and who had been doing it for a very long time and
America was just now waking up to this reality. Yeah, it's your teachers. It's the cops
Even the mayor of your town. Mm-hmm. There's a battle between good and evil very much going on right now
Yeah, and somehow some way and people are still studying this
Um, America clomped on to this idea and ran with it
Like it was for real the idea that there were say murderous
child molesting satanic cults
Operating almost openly in the United States was a very deep and widespread belief
Not just among religious people although they were at the forefront of this
But among people who were writing academic papers and creating television shows in the news
It was people in the courts were subscribed to this. It was this it was a
It was what's called a moral panic. Yeah, and when I was reading this even though I lived through it
I kept thinking how in the world did this happen in the 1980s 1980s not the 1640s, right?
Not the 1300s sure
And it turns out there's a lot of reasons why and
We got to go back in time a little bit to touch on the early reasons got to go back in time
So this is
That should be our way back machine theme song. That was just too darn loud
What was I was continuing with the back to the future references. What was too darn loud?
Remember Huey Lewis when he auditioned he said, I'm sorry. That's just
That's right
Thank you. Thank you
And by the way, this is not just the United States apparently it was in the UK Australia Canada South Africa South Africa
Still has a cult crimes division. Yeah, I believe it. So Robert Lam wrote this article of stuff to blow your mind
And we're gonna be drawing from other articles as well, which will name drop along the way. I guess
One from slate that was good boom. There's some name dropping
I've got one for you. I'll hit it up later. All right. So part of the groundwork was laid for this in ancient history
And Robert does a good job in pointing out that there is long
Especially when it comes to Christian theology long been a divide between us and them heaven and hell
Two sides good and evil good and evil light and dark. I
Was gonna repeat that too. What else?
Yin and Yang is super Christian. No, actually, I think Yin and Yang work together, right?
Sure. Yeah, we should do it on Yin Yang, but a lot of people it's not just Christians Chuck
There's humans subscribe to an in-group out-group mentality. Yeah, absolutely
Like I took an anthropology class once and the professor was like try to go a day without using words like us them
We yeah, they it's impossible
Virtually impossible politics. That's just the way our minds go in-group out-group and our group is safe and good
Their group is potentially threatening and possibly bad. We don't know. Absolutely. So throughout history
This has come up again and again and again and innocent people have been persecuted for doing nothing at all
one good example are
the Jewish people
Christians accused Jews and
1475 of using blood for kidnapped Christian children in rituals
Which is pretty ironic because the Romans just a few hundred years before had accused the Christians of
bathing and dining and feasting on baby's blood us in them once again, baby's blood. It's a go-to
thing for
Villifying an out-group. Oh, yeah, but you see baby's blood in a lot of these cases. Yeah, because that's I guess the hardest blood to get a
hold of yeah
It's expensive blood and the most grizzly
Witchcraft everyone of course we did we do one on the Salem witch trials or just McCarthyism. We did one. I believe yeah
Well, let's say we have and if we haven't we will
Like member on like them being high on air got
Yeah, we did something like that
Okay, all right, so 15th century you had witchcraft persecutions all over Europe
innocent women being
Killed drowned burned you name it
And of course none of this was true in all cases
When it comes to art, they laid the groundwork in the 19th century the French romantic artists
loved painting stuff about Satan and witchcraft and
and by the 1920s and the West we had pretty firm established a
groundwork for believing in
things like demons and Satan and a fiery hell
And people who who worship this Satan? Yeah, and a lot this the weird thing is Chuck is there's a still to this day
There's this idea that at some point back in antiquity at least there were devil worshipers
Who like killed for Satan and all of this was born out of whole cloth fabricated from?
People who are doing the religious persecution along the way and the people who are being tortured to confess
Into this kind of stuff. It was all just fabricated
But the fact that it was old the fact that it was
Sensational yeah, and the fact that it had been repeated so many times it gained traction to become this
To gain this idea that it is historical fact at some point. Yes, people just take it as fact, but it's not true
No, it's not true. It's never been true never been satanic satanic death cults in the United States or anywhere else, right?
These people have never existed no now that is not to say that people haven't killed in the name of Satan or anything like that
But there's never been any kind of satanic death cult ever in the history of the world as far as we can ever tell
it's all made up right and
We want to go further by saying that these people who have killed in the name of Satan
Are actually an example of life imitating art. Yeah, they're inspired by the thick the fictitious myth
Because they're gullible and buy into it just as much as the people who think that this stuff is out there, too
Like Richard Ramirez sure and he was driven by Satan or something like that
There was a girl in the 80s in Georgia who supposedly killed a friend
And then performed a satanic ritual. It's like this stuff did happen
Yeah, but it happened as a result of the hysteria movie. It is a positive feedback. Yeah, absolutely
So now we're in the 20th century and the roots of satanic panic can be found all throughout the entertainment industry
Yeah, books. There was one in 1927 by Herbert Gorman called the place called Dagon
Which was very influential and radical at the time
Complete fiction of course, but that doesn't
Doesn't stop it from
Establishing former roots that this could be a thing right and that's something that kind of keeps coming up again and again a
Movie or a work of fiction. Yeah, we'll establish some storyline
And then somebody will have read it and told a friend about it or something like that
And then it becomes a game of telephone along the way
Somebody stopped saying I read in this work of fiction right or I saw in this movie this happened instead
It becomes this happened. Yeah a friend of mine's sister. Yeah, which we'll get to a urban legend is one theory, of course
Yeah, and I know we did a podcast on that we did
1968 a couple of movies came out one horror film called the devil rides out with the great Christopher Lee
Because he was in every weird movie. He was great, man. He was the tall man in phantasm, right?
No
Who's that then?
Christopher Lee was sure was he? Oh, no, that's Angus somebody. You're right. Christopher Lee was the guy from like the wicker man
Yeah, I mean dozens and dozens of horror movies played Dracula a lot
Rosemary's baby also came out that year, which was way more mainstream
Big big hit great movie. Yeah, really good still very creepy movie with Mia Farrow and
Cassavetes and Charles Groden weirdly. I guess it's not weird, but I just associate him with comedy
Yeah, but he always plays a straight man so he could go back and forth. Yeah, he could straddle worlds
Yeah
So those movies were huge as far as planning and you know, of course other things like the Omen and the Exorcist and it was just
it was just a
Big time for talking about Satan and movies. Yeah, it's very popular
What's interesting is you can trace it back to and initially that book the place called Dagon
Which inspired HP Lovecraft? Yeah, that started it all basically
Music of course, which if we ever do one on the PMRC, you'll get to that and backmasking more heavily but
Satanic imagery and everything from like Iron Maiden to King Diamond and
Judas Priest. Yeah, Judas Priest. Remember they got hauled in the court for backmasking. Yeah
Man
people I know and
Then you have some real-life things real-life occult like
Alistair Crowley and Anton Levese who really didn't help quell Satanic panic fears
If anything they help set the stage. No dressing up like with candles and being naked with like cloaks and pentagrams
Right, isn't gonna make people feel any better. No, but that's what they're doing
And if you will like I said, we'll do on a Satanism if you look at Satanism
It's not let's sacrifice animals and throw blood on each other. It's more like hey
We're on this earth for a short time. Let's party and just live for ourselves, right?
It's more about hedonism and being atheist right then some weird dark occult Alistair Crowley was darker and more occult
Sure and Anton Levese definitely dressed his brand of Satanism up in that kind of like dark theatrics
Sure, but the really ironic thing about both of those guys occult stuff is that again
It was life imitating art or life imitating fiction
Yeah, their ideas of the black mask or the witches Sabbath or wearing pentagrams all that stuff
Yeah came out of those witch persecutions from before they were fabricated from whole cloth
So these guys were tapping into what was already part of the popular culture in the in the way of what people thought of Satanism and
Satanic rituals and we're just basically playing it up to the end is what it was very much
So yeah, but to people who are scared to death of the idea that Satan is real and his worshipers are here on earth
And are ready to kill you those guys
Scared those people and just proved that this is very real. See look at those two
Anton Levese Alistair Crowley proved that there are Satanic cults
Exactly, and who knows what's going on but on that big huge iron wooden door
All right, well, let's take a break here and we're gonna come back and talk a little bit about
The 1970s
Stranger Danger Panic which factors in big time on the podcast pay dude the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor
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All right, it's the 1970s and all of a sudden all you can hear about on the news is
Our stories about child pornography rings child murders child murders
kidnappings
Crimes involving children in general and not just that Chuck like at that time America was really waking up to the
To just how widespread child abuse was yeah the 1970s, which is yeah that it took that long
Yeah, it really was because apparently it took it just a couple of doctors to really stand up and be like
I'm not looking the other way again on these unexplained breaks to a child's arm. Yeah
It's the it's the parents. You're you're breaking your kids arms. It's abuse. That's wrong
Right stop doing that and as a result the government stood up and was like, okay
We need some laws here one of the things that they enacted were mandatory reporting laws
If you're a doctor and you notice signs of child abuse
Yeah, you have to report it and as a result in 1974 child abuse cases went from
60,000 nationwide yeah to the year 2000 there were three million reported right and it was because of
Public education a lot more visibility
And then mandatory reporting laws, but it had this cumulative effect of saying America your children are being
They're in danger. Yeah, and you need to do something about it and this child protection
Movement grew out of it. Yeah, and I also get the sense that pre the late 70s. I think the media
It was unsavory to report on this kind of stuff. It's like that's that family's business. Yeah, and just period
It's like no one wants to hear about this stuff. It's awful, right and somehow it got transferred to
Probably to drive ratings like this is sensational is what it is sure yeah
Anytime America is scared all you have to do is poke and prod it and you will get people to watch your TV show
That's right, and it's done very frequently. It's sad and despicable, but it happens a lot. It still does
There's another aspect to this too Chuck
With the with the child protection idea
This is also a time the 70s
Especially is when it when women started to go back to work after they had kids yeah before they they may work
And then they would have kids and that was it for their professional career
They would just stay home. They were moms for the rest of their time if they ever worked at all originally, right?
Now in the 70s in the 80s women were having kids going back to work
And as a result they were having to leave their kids in more and more daycare workers
Care. Oh, yeah, and so this idea that their children were being abused or potentially abused really resonated with families
Where their kids were in daycare and weren't like constantly under their supervision all the time
How well do you know the people watching your kids? How much do you trust them? Yeah, are they Satanists?
Yeah, and this this fear took root because of that
Collective anxiety at the time with more and more families putting their kids in daycare, right?
Or they're just latchkey kids a little older. Yeah, who I remember during the Atlanta child murders
Do you know where your children are? It's 10. Oh, yeah, I'll bet you know where your children are. Yeah, it was just a time of of
in a good way
people were more aware of
Than ever of potential dangers for their children. Yeah, so it's not like it was all bad
But when it goes into panic and I well, we'll just see what happened. Yeah
It went from like zero to 120. Yeah, just a couple of seconds basically. So what happened was during the satanic panic
Largely it is based around
court cases where
largely
daycare centers and people who cared for children were now being accused of
Some of the craziest things you could ever imagine in your entire life. Yeah
And like you said, one of the reasons this was fueled was very much because parents could relate to it
I mean, should we go ahead and talk about a couple of these cases? Yeah, um, you know, the whole thing sounds crazy and weird and everything
but
just
Inocuous, I guess
Until you come across the court cases. Yes, and then you're like, oh real people lost decades of their lives because of this because
Goalable people were in position of power and locked them up. Yeah. All right, let's talk about the Kellers
What was the actual where this is one in Texas? Yeah in Austin and Austin, Texas
Francis and Dan Keller
Ran a daycare center out of their home and were accused of the following things among others
Drowning and dismembering babies in front of other children
Killing animals dogs and cats in front of children and baby tigers baby tigers. That's right
Taking the kids to Mexico to be abused sexually by
Mexican army soldiers and then brought back in time for their parents to pick them up. That's right
Dressing is pumpkin. This is my favorite and shooting children in the arms and legs. Yep
Putting children into a pool with sharks that ate babies
Mm-hmm putting blood in their Kool-Aid forcing children to carry the bones of
Of
Bodies that they had dug up sure and this is just a few and I'm getting most of this from this great slayed article the real victims of
Satanic ritual abuse SRA by Linda Rodriguez McRobbie
So the Kellers were accused of all this stuff
And here's generally what happens Robert points out a lot of times it starts with one
Perhaps credible case of child abuse. Yeah sexual or otherwise, right and then that's snowballs. They tell the parents
Maybe this is going on so they tell the parents
Hey that your child may be
May be abused the parents start looking they start talking to other parents in that same daycare center
They start looking they start asking their kids right and it all snowballs
Into these little preschoolers basically making stuff up and not only that it's like yeah
Yeah, I've heard about that that's just abused it like it's some Satanists that are like molesting children and murdering
I'm in the parents are like what?
Yeah, or that plays into something they'd already heard on on TV, which we'll talk about the media's role in this
Yeah, and like you said it snowballs and snowballs and all of a sudden
once concerned parents
Get involved
And start talking to one another panicked concerned parents exactly. Yeah, then
people can end up falsely accused of some pretty horrendous stuff people stop thinking critically and
You've got problems if you're on the receiving end of finger being pointed at you
Well, yeah, cuz if you're a parent and your child goes to this daycare center another parent and the cops come and say hey
This parents kid was sexually abused what parents gonna be like. Oh, I'm sure it's fine
Yeah, you're fine quick quick complaining. Yeah, I'm not gonna check out my kid. Take a salt tablet
so so with the with with the
McMartin case which happened in Southern, California. Yeah, and and actually
Ended up helping turn the tide against this
But the McMartin case and then the Keller case in Texas both of those were bolstered actually by bad medical testimony
Yeah, by inexperienced doctors who didn't know what they were looking at who in their defense a little bit
Was the at the time no one knew no one was looking at little kids like three-year-olds
Viginas in describing what normal ones looked like right so since you didn't know what to look for but
Thought you were looking for evidence of sexual abuse, right anything
Could conceivably look like evidence of say vaginal trauma or something like that and in the case of the Kellers in particular
the little girl who was basically I guess
Accuser zero of this
Was was examined and found that her vagina showed
Some evidence of trauma later on the doctor after gaining decades of experience
saw that no that was totally normal what I saw yeah, and is not the
That's I basically gave false testimony unwittingly, and I'm sorry yeah
And that was a huge thing because these people were locked away because of medical testimony
And again the case against the McMartin's was also bolstered by bad medical advice as well or bad medical testimony
Yeah, so with the Keller case the patient or not patient victim zero Christy cheviers
Shavia, I don't know how you'd say it
She was three years old. Uh-huh didn't go to the daycare center much
And in 1991 told her mom that Dan Keller had spanked her
That's what started this whole thing. Yeah, so all of a sudden the mom says
And here's a key fact here the mom goes to her therapist
Yeah, Donna David Campbell who the little girl was seeing because she'd been acting out
She's like a central figure in this whole thing this whole
Snafu who the doctor yeah, so they go to her and say listen something's going on here
Can you talk to her about it and all of a sudden?
Donna Campbell Donna David Campbell starts coaxing out all these really bizarre
Alligations about what's going on there
They made us take off our clothes and had a parrot peckus on the pee pee that was one
That was the earliest accusation that that formed the foundation of this whole case the basis of the snowball
Yes, so this is this is
This is what begins the snowball. This is when the mom goes to the other parents like you hear what's going on here
We'll look at what's happened to my daughter and what's really happening here is
something called
It was part of the recovered therapy recovered memory therapy movement
Which was very big at the time in psychology, right? Basically the idea that we have these repressed memories
That of abuse many people do that they have no idea of and it's up to the therapist to bring these out of us
Yeah, that's almost like a separate intertwined thread to this whole satanic panic thing the satanic ritual abuses the recovered memory therapy movement, right and
So the satanic panic can actually trace its roots
Directly to a book from 1972 by a guy named Mike Warnke. He was a Christian sandup comedian
He also was totally full of it
He wrote a book called the Satan cellar where he talked about his life as a former satanic cult
Priest I believe yeah and drug dealer and he was eventually exposed far too late by the Christian magazine
Cornerstone as almost entirely fraudulent and made up in just a liar
Yeah, but his book just sold like wildfire through the the Christian fundamentalist community and basically
Really established the groundwork for the idea that there were satanic cults operating in the United States, right?
Yeah for for the thread of the
recovered memory
Movement that formed part of the satanic panic you can trace that back to a book from 1980
Yeah called. I think Michelle remembers. Yeah, 1980 and this was a by the way I
Was the on the cover of a Christian magazine in the 1980s cornerstone magazine. I thought it was but it wasn't guideposts
I've heard of that. That's a bit. It's a big-time Christian magazine man. That's a cover boy one month
What were you doing on the cover?
I was I was at a church camp one summer and that was just like it was like a four-panel cover
Uh-huh of just kids having fun at church camp and I was one of them the May 82 issue
Man, I hope I wish I could track that thing down. They'd be great
You if anyone out there has the issue of Chuck on the cover of guideposts magazine from do you remember the year roughly?
it would have been
Probably between 1985 and 1987 okay, we need that everyone. I want to post that that cover
That would be awesome. So this book Michelle remembers it was a it was just like dropping a bomb in the midst of this
Everybody so everyone was transitioning from who can we start?
Pointing at and persecuting. Yeah now that we've decided the cults are okay, and we're gonna stop deprogramming them
Yeah, who could we do what could we do next and this book comes in the midst of that in 1980 and it's a book about a woman named
Michelle and her therapist Lawrence Pazder. Yeah, he wrote it and he he was he helped her
Uncover repressed memories of being ritually satanically abused or satanic ritually abused in the 1950s in Vancouver
Yeah, he actually ended up marrying her and he coined the term ritual abuse that lies directly at his feet and
This thing had a lot of traction. I mean this lady was on Oprah. Yeah, she did the talk show circuit
Oh, yeah for years the guy was used as an expert witness in court cases like he's he founded a whole movement in psychology
It was completely debunked. Yeah, and the whole idea is it's based on this premise that
If you undergo a traumatic experience your mind is going to try to repress that memory
Yeah, but it's gonna have all sorts of horrible effects in your life
You're gonna be an alcoholic and a drug addict and maybe a child abuser and you won't know why but it's because you were abused as a
Child probably by satanists and you covered it up and you need to go to therapy to have it unlocked
That's right
And a lot of people went to therapy and had these memories unlocked which only proved Pazder's point even further, right?
The problem is is if when they were reexamined they were pseudo memories through the power of suggestion and overzealous
Therapists a lot of people form memories of stuff that never happened. Yeah, the problem is recovered memory therapy
There's little to no scientific evidence that it's a thing at all, right that people unconsciously repress these memories
The Royal College of Psychiatrists in Britain
They have officially banned its members from using it all together the British Psychological Society
Says you can use it
But you can't draw any premature conclusions. You have to have evidence not just well
This is what they said in therapy, right? So that's a repressed memory that came to the surface, right?
And the AMA I'm sorry the APA and the United States
Their official stance was issued in 1980. I'm sorry in 1998
There's a consensus among memory researchers and clinicians that most people who are sexually abused as children
Remember all or part of what happened to them, although they may not fully understand or disclose it
so a competent psychotherapist is
Likely to acknowledge that current knowledge does not allow the definite conclusion without corroborating evidence, right? So again
The general consensus is that people don't completely unconsciously forget everything that happened, right?
It's virtually impossible. Yeah, and so they're this idea that
During therapy while you're coaxing these memories out
You're actually forming pseudo therapy is backed up by a lot of follow-up research pseudo memory pseudo memory
Sorry. Yeah is backed up by research. There's a researcher famous memory researcher named Elizabeth Loftus
She found that 90% of participants of this study came to
Believe that they had done something they hadn't when confronted with
Witnesses who said that they had done it. That's the real danger in all this
Sure, is it these memories become just as valid as real memories and do
Damage because they aren't real and there's actually a real-life case that came out of all this this one was crazy Paul Ingram
Yeah, Paul Ingram was a sheriff's deputy
and he was accused by his young daughter of
Satanic ritually abusing her and that he was a member of a satanic cult and that
She had been raped by this cult six to eight hundred times
they had been involved in the murder of 25 babies at least and
and Paul Ingram said I
don't remember any of this but
You must be right. So I I'm going to confess. He was a preacher too. When he yeah, he was a fundamentalist Christian
So he was very much primed to believe that there is a very a very real Satan roaming the earth and
If his daughter is telling him that he did this why what what reason does she have to lie?
So he actually I mean he bought into it and and took the rap for this even though it never happened
No one ever showed that any of this stuff happened. Yeah, he served his full prison sentence of 20 years 20 years
And maybe didn't even do it anything. Yeah
But he himself said well, I don't know. Maybe I did yeah
And I think he fully bought into it over time such a weird reversal in that case. It is you know, yeah
Um, should we take another break? Maybe so all right
We'll take another break here and talk about the media and then some other theories and in cases and satanic panic
On the podcast hey, dude the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor stars of the cult classic show
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All right, if you were
Alive from the 1980s and early 90s, which I was then you remember opera
Geraldo bubble yum
Sally Jesse Raphael. Yeah, you name it every single talk show Donahue
Yeah, doing lots and lots of shows on
Satanic death cults
If it's 2 p.m. On a Wednesday afternoon
And you want to figure out how to get America to turn their TV to your station
You would have had a choice of different shows to watch probably total. Oh covering satanic. Yeah on the same day, right?
And yeah, everybody did Satanists and Geraldo was the king of this
He actually had a two-hour primetime special in 1988 called
Exposing Satan's underground and it is on YouTube and I think about 10 parts
I watched one of them. Yeah, where he had Ozzie on yeah, and Ozzie's like
For Ozzie he's Ozzie looks like a pre golden girls Dorothy is the way he's dressed and done up
It's awesome, but he's like I don't mean to freak anybody out with me music
He doesn't know what to make of this, but I was like Ozzie just sit there
We'll get back to you later, right, but there's this classic line in this right Geraldo goes
they're talking about a murder that was carried out by this boy and
Geraldo says to this cop he goes detective you're a cop not a theologian, but let me ask you was this boy possessed
dead serious and the cop was like
I
Hedges a little bit like I think that's a state of mind, but yeah in that sense. Yes, I think he was
Geraldo doesn't give it he's looking for out of the guy
So he goes to an actual theologian a priest. Yeah, you know, you're you're you're charged with
Investigating these cases for the Catholic Church. Do you think that this is a case of possession?
He's like absolutely and her all is like, yes
That's what I was looking for
But that's the level of journalism that people were tuning into unlike NBC eight o'clock for two hours in like the highest rated
two-hour TV documentary ever and a third or a half of America is like what idiot believes this is the most entertaining thing
I've ever seen the other half is
Scared to death and thinks that all of this is totally real. Yeah, you know, it's easy to laugh about now
But shame on all of them. Well, Geraldo came out and said I want to apologize
Oh, he did that bit of journalism that was really bad. Yeah, I'm sorry for it
But I mean that's how he made his name with stuff like that. Well, he was caught up in the moral panic. Everyone was doing it
Yeah, there was a book in 1990 a children's picture book
Called
Don't make me go back mommy colon a child's book about satanic ritual abuse. Yeah
To read to your children or if you were a therapist to use in therapy. Yeah, right, you know that while they also had
In many of the court cases little little anatomically correct ragdolls that they would use in court
Like, you know, show me where you were touched and things like this, right, which I'm sure that has valid use as well
And you know like sex abuse cases for sure, but you know like completely poo-pooing that you have to
You have to use that you I would imagine you you're training in how to do that correctly without inadvertently or inadvertently leading
The the child on into
Creating some sort of pseudo memory. Yeah, well, it should be extensive. I would guess. Yeah, you know, I mean
Yeah, so the media was definitely
complicit in all this
Really saw that there is a lot of ratings to be had in just fanning the flames of the satanic panic
And I think a lot of people bought into it as well
and then so too were things like the
The field of psychiatry and psychology very much complicit in this by allowing repressed memory therapy to really spread as much as it
Did without any kind of real
Verified research into whether it was real or not. Yeah, and to defend them a little bit
Robert also makes it points. They're probably well-meaning probably thinking they were doing this great work like helping these kids. Well, sure, but like
with no scientific basis whatsoever, right and
Lacking a lot of critical thinking too. Yeah, and they dressed as pumpkins and shot the kids in the arms and the legs
Where are the bullet wounds? Yeah, how exactly did they get the kids to Mexico and then back to Austin in the average daycare day?
Secret tunnels, you know secret tunnels that was an explanation. There was a lot. There wasn't enough critical thinking so you can definitely take
the media
psychology psychiatry and a lot of law enforcement investigators
To task for this, but really there were a lot of hucksters and fraudsters
making a lot of money as
Satanic experts at the time. Oh, yeah, both is like legal legal
representatives
Expert witnesses authors
Going on shows like her all though and Sally Jesse Raphael
And those people are really should bear the brunt of this because they were just lying. Yeah
Lying lying lying their faces off
And and scaring people to death and making a lot of money out of it. So we said it was widespread
There was a red book magazine survey in 1994 and this is at the end of the whole thing. Yeah, true that found that 70% of Americans believed
in satanic ritual abuse
And in 1993, this is the really scary one a survey by the American Bar Association
Center on Children and the law found that 26%
Quarter more than a quarter of prosecutors said they handled at least one case
involving ritual satanic ritual abuse during that time period. Yeah, 25 percent. Yeah, 26 percent. So
Within that time, too, there was a very famous case in 1993 in West Memphis, Arkansas
Yeah, the West Memphis 3
Who were very famously exonerated thanks to crack documentary filmmaking? Yeah on HBO's half
As a matter of fact, HBO really led the vanguard against this whole satanic panic. Yeah, they released in 1995
a
Documentary or I think it was a biopic on the McMartin trial. It wasn't a documentary. I think it was like dramatized
Oh, really and that really started to change the tide of how
academics intellectuals and the media itself saw satanic ritual abuse started to expose it as mmm. This is not real
Yeah, and this is after the McMartin trial had been the longest and most expensive trial in the history of the United States
That's right 15 to 16 million dollars spent for with zero convictions because it didn't happen, right?
And that case actually was
started with a woman who believed her child had been sexually abused and the woman actually sadly went on to die from alcohol poisoning a
Couple years later and was schizophrenic
She was diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic in that time and yet nobody stopped and said oh, well, wait a minute
She was the center of the accusers of all this should be
We take another look at all this it was like no
Let's spend 15 million dollars a taxpayer money trying to prosecute these people and get zero convictions out of it
The West Memphis three were successfully prosecuted in Arkansas. I mean railroaded. Yeah
There is no other way to put this thanks to something like a false confession by Jesse miss Kelly
Which is mind-blowing until you should go listen to our episode on false confessions, which I believe we did that one, right?
Either that or it was a part of another one, but yeah, we covered that topic for sure
Um and the end all of that was based on the satanic panic thing as well
But you should definitely watch those again HBO documentaries paradise lost one two and three. Yeah, and they um
They made the original in paradise lost the child murders of Robin Hood Hills
Mm-hmm, and I think they thought it was the same guy. Did you see brothers keeper the other documentary?
Uh, yeah about the the older older brothers love that one man
That's the same guy that brothers keepers will put him on the map
Uh-huh, so I think he thought that paradise lost one was just the documentary and to his credit
Joe
Biden burlinger sure I think he
He really championed this case and followed it to its conclusion over the course of two more documentaries over the years
Yeah, and from what I understand he changed his mind about the the
Content or the crime midstream like I think yeah, didn't he go there thinking he was just covering the crime
And then yeah, actually saw what was going on. It's like whoa. Yeah, I think I think he was I mean because of him
They were exonerated. Yeah, ultimately. Yeah, like he got three people out of prison one off death row. Yeah
Yeah, that's off, but again, this is part of the satanic panic scare
and that not that one that kind of came at the end of it, but the
McMartin movie on HBO started to change the tide and so too to the exoneration of a woman named
Margaret Kelly Michaels in New Jersey
In 1993 she was let out of prison after it was revealed how coercive the questioning was
Yeah
Of the children who ended up accusing her of this and that was true in every case it seems like it was it shed a
Lot of light onto this and people started going like whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Wait. This is coercive, huh?
Let's look at these other cases. Yeah, and you go back and look at the transcripts and see like
Okay, these people were basically telling the kids what they wanted to hear. Yeah
They were using
Approval whenever the kids said something that that pointed the finger, right?
They were using disapproval when they the kids refused to talk or whatever or
Implicate anyone and if you go back and really listen to what the kids are saying a lot of the times
They're like no nothing happened. Well, and then they would follow that with are you sure this didn't happen?
Right. Are you sure this didn't happen?
You're not supposed to do that and you're certainly not supposed to put people in prison for half of their lives
Well, and you're especially not supposed to do that to a kid who's highly suggestible
Right and wants to please because most kids want to please right and when you look at some of these allegations
It sounds like if you asked a three-year-old to make up what they think
Ritual abuse would be right here's what a kid would say. Yeah, they locked us in a closet with spiders and snakes
Yeah, they put us in a pool with sharks that ate babies and they fed us baby parts, right?
So the real death knell of the satanic ritual abuse scare came in 1994
with a meta-survey for the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect and
this study
It contacted
Prosecutors regular lawyers social workers psychologists
I think that was it thousands and tens of thousands of them across the country ended up whittling it down to a sizable sample and
Found all sorts of things
Specifically what they found is there was no evidence whatsoever of any satanic cults operating anywhere in the US or a single crime
Carried out by a satanic cult. They said that they found a couple of
Crimes that were carried out by people allegedly in the name of Satan
But that these were most likely inspired by the satanic panic itself and solo
Affairs, that's what yeah, that's what that's what I'm saying. Yeah, but they had had it wasn't a satanic cult by any means
they also found in this study that children of
The ages that that where they would go to daycare weren't capable of forming the type of accusations
Against satanic ritual abuse. Yeah
that people had been convicted of that clearly the adults were the ones who were
Channeling themselves through their children. Yeah to accuse these people the kids were saying things like they locked us in a closet
With spiders and snakes. Yeah, they weren't saying like they carved open a baby and
Sexually abused it and then we all drank its blood while everyone's wearing black robes
They're not sophisticated enough to think that kind of thing
So the study also proved that too and then ironically the same survey found plenty of evidence of religious-based crimes
Including murders carried out
Things like exorcisms that went too far that kind of stuff. They're like that actually is real, right?
And ironically we have a lot of laws protecting people who do that, but we have
laws that step up the punishment for its satanic abuse even though that doesn't exist and
That one really changed the tide of how people saw the satanic panic. Well, yeah, and then experts later came out and said as far as the
Physical abuse and the doctors who testified at trial like the type of a physical abuse these kids were enduring
They were like a layman could look at a child right and and say wow what happened to this kid
But you will obviously never be able to reproduce. Yeah, you're totally mangled not this like ambiguous
Like well, yeah, I think it seems like they had some marks where they could have been, you know
Molested or something right like it would have been so obvious right because these allegations were so far out there
Yeah, and of course years later. They say this at the time. Everyone was drinking the flavor aid. Yeah, you know nice the blood
drenched flavor aid and insult to injury that same media all of a sudden the hot story became
The outrage that was satanic panic and what a bunch of crap that it was, right?
So now let's cover that story in full. Yeah, even though we had a lot to do with it, right? Yeah
So Chuck why did people drink the flavor aid like what was the immediate?
Reason for the satanic panic. Well, you found this great
Article, which one I found a lot of great articles
The three satanic ritual abuse as oh, yeah, the sociological article
Yeah, that was good
They have a few reasons as
Subversion ideology as rumor panic and as contemporary legend and the subversion ideology I thought was super interesting
I didn't even know what that was. I hadn't heard of it before you they define it as a culturally constructed myth that gives
Shape and form to feelings of anxiety and uncertainty about the future that are experienced between periods of rapid
Unpredictable social change, right? So so we're anxious. We're not even necessarily conscious of our anxiety
But we just we don't feel quite right. We're everything's changing. We don't know what's going on
So what's yeah, what exactly is making us nervous? Oh, how about that group over there Satanists?
Yeah, before it was Jews and before that it was Christians exactly now
It's a face to to this underlying sense of dread we feel because the times are a change exactly and it gives us a
An outlet at the expense of other people, but that's the with the subversion ideology
the hallmark characteristic of it is that that that other group takes everything we hold dear and
Values the opposite of it. Yeah, right. So Satanists they they use upside-down crosses and evil is what's really good
And it was it's a classic example of subversion
Ideology well and one thing I thought was really interesting in here is they contend and I'm sure it's true that
Subversion ideology actually ends up having a stabilizing effect because people then go. Oh, okay
Well, that's why I'm so upset and worried and anxious is because of these Satanists
Yeah, not what's really going on which is the end of the millennium apparently. Oh really? Yeah, whatever
That was another explanation. I ran across is that it was millennial anxiety
There is also no the another when you said moral or rumor panic. Yeah
Which we touched on before but basically that is this idea that
It's just buying into a rumor. Yeah, like really really buying into it and the way you buy into it is because all of a sudden
professional psychiatrists and psychologists and law enforcement people and
People in the newspaper are talking about this stuff like it's fact and with that because we trust these people as being smart
Intelligent people it becomes fact in the eyes and the minds of just normal people and that gives it
Veracity in and of itself once people start believing something as fact without any proof
Yeah, you a rumor panic has just set in well and ironically to them. It seems like the more out there
The the panic is the more readily it's believed because that the old like who would make something like that up, right?
Well, a three-year-old might being coaxed by police and her parents and her shrink
Yeah, and then the last one is an urban legend which we talked about before but this sociological article pointed something out that I hadn't thought of that
Urban legends deal in metaphors even though we don't think of them as metaphors
So in this case the children that were being abused by Satanists were a metaphor for our future and children our future
Just go ask Whitney Houston
You can't it's true and then as people start to buy into it
It becomes a rumor panic and you can dress it up with some version ideology
So in the end the McMartens, I don't think they ever well, I think they serve never prosecuted
I think they were in jail here and there while the trial was going on
Yeah, but they were never prosecuted but never successfully prosecuted the Kellers were eventually exonerated
But they spent 21 years in prison on their life was ruined 21 years in prison each based on these false accusations
I have to say if you want to read one of the better articles. I've ever read it's called the innocent and the damned
It's from Texas Monthly. It was written in 1994 while this
Satanic panic is going on, but somehow Texas Monthly took a critical eye to this stuff. Yeah, really good article
I thought this was so fascinating because as crazy as it seems now
And like I was saying at the very beginning like how in the world in the 1980s did we buy into this like it was
Salem, Massachusetts. Yeah
When you look at the reasons behind it, it was like the perfect storm coalescing
It sort of makes perfect sense when you look at everything behind it
It does but doesn't it also it's still not like even even even if you take into account that you're using hindsight and that the
Perspective that's afforded by that. Yeah, the gullibility. I know that's it that is involves in a moral panic is
It's just
It's saddening. I bet Edward Bernays would have been all over this. Oh, yeah. Well, he fomented those kind of things
You know, um
Yeah
Yeah, it's sad
Also, if you want some yucks go look up law enforcement guide to Satanic cults on YouTube
The video series. Yeah
Yeah, so weird. I'm glad to know that you had a Satan house in your neighborhood, too
I think everybody did or rumors that like somebody found a cat with its head cut off in a pentagram
Oh, that happened. Yeah, because I'm ten which is okay. If you're ten, but if you're fifty, it's not okay
Especially if you're the local prosecutor. Yeah
And also one last thing Chuck it makes you wonder what moral panics are we working on right now? Oh, yeah
What's a brewing? It's not like this is ancient history. No, you know
If you want to know more about moral panics and specifically to say tannic panic
You can type those words into the search bar at howstuffworks.com
Since I said search bar, it's time for lesson or mail
Here's what I predict is that some people are gonna write in and say dudes
We're in the middle of another moral panic right now and it is blank vocal fry
perhaps
Somebody called me the fry master and an email. Do you see that?
And no, I didn't she was like Chuck always uses vocal fry and then when I listen to my voice
I'm like I totally do. Yeah, but uh
I've noticed it a lot more since we
Did that episode yeah
Whatever I'm being me. Yeah, man. You should I'm a trendsetter
I'm gonna call this oh
Guys sitting straight on these grocery store donations
Okay. Hey guys longtime listener love you guys never thought
This would be the reason I have to reach out to you at the end of the podcast on Tuesday
You said I don't know which podcast it was at the end of the recent podcast
Actually, I had to stop and say no
Because my friends Josh and Chuck didn't just do that until people not to donate a dollar or two buy the little
Hot air balloons at the grocery store because the company then uses those donations to get a tax credit
This is absolutely not true. That is not true with that guy. So he says I have actually been working with
Children's Miracle Network Hospitals in Connecticut for about 20 years and by the way when I said the balloons
I forgot that was children's Miracle Network specifically. I used to do a lot of work with them in LA
So you weren't singling them on video shoots. No, of course not. They're amazing
You're like, it's the shamrocks. I have a problem. I know it just felt terrible after that. So
He says our corporate partners do not get tax credits for donations made by their customers
In fact, many of our corporate partners ring at these donations through their registers
So the donation shows on the customer's receipt allowing of them to use that for their taxes
What a quick fun fact about the Miracle balloon
That I reference is that the first one ever sold in the entire world was at a small diner in downtown
Middletown, Connecticut
Roy Cohn in
1986
I thought he's gonna say like 1904. Yeah
Soon after that the Miracle balloon became a multinational program that raises money for more than
170 local children's hospitals across the US and Canada and its creator became very very rich
As I mentioned, I've been doing this job for about 20 years and I have to tell
That I always say I have the best job in the world. I get to work with amazing people like my co-workers and all of our partners
And I get to work for the most inspiring people our patient families. Please help me get this corrected the stuff
You should know Legion
Don't worry. I still love you guys. That is from Scott
Organic the director of Children's Miracle Network Hospitals Wow from the horse's mouth or a director. Yeah, so I don't
We're gonna have to look into this a little further. I think we got other people that said that's not true
And other people said it is true for Children's Miracle Network
I'm sure he knows what he's talking about. Oh, yeah, but there are all kinds of things to donate to and it's also probably not a liar
I don't know. He seems like a
Regular guy not a satanic virtual abuser. No not at all in any way, right?
So we'll look into it. I certainly did not mean to disparage the no
I didn't either and I mean if that's the way it works, I retract that but I need to look into it a little more first
All right, the jury's out
Thank you very much. What's his name David? Yep, David. You're awesome. Thank you for the work
You're doing too. If you want to get in touch with us to set us straight
We love 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 stuff podcast at howstuffworks.com
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Stuff you should know is a production of I heart radios how stuff works for more podcasts from my heart radio
Visit the I heart radio app Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows
On the podcast hey dude the 90s called David Lacher and Christine Taylor stars of the cult classic show
Hey, dude bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces
We're gonna use hey dude as our jumping-off point
But we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it
Listen to hey dude the 90s called on the I heart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I heart 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 I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts