99% Invisible - The Great American Pyramid
Episode Date: April 1, 2025In 1991, one of the strangest buildings in America opened — a 32-storey, stainless steel pyramid in Memphis, Tennessee.The Great American Pyramid Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new epi...sodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and get exclusive access to bonus episodes. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Memphis, Tennessee is home to many historic landmarks like Graceland and Beale Street,
but one of their biggest tourist magnets is a Bass Pro Shop.
Usually, Bass Pro is the place to buy hunting and fishing gear.
Bass producer Chris Berube.
But the one in Memphis, it's less of a store
and more of a camo-colored amusement park.
On the main floor, there are fiberglass cypress trees
that are about 100 feet tall,
and there's an enclosure with baby alligators.
They have a fake swamp that is filled with real fish
and a crossbow range and an arcade
where kids can take target practice with plastic
guns, which gave this Passifist Canadian a few moments of pause.
Across the way I see a man showing his infant child how to load a gun.
It's a little unnerving.
It can feel completely surreal to be inside the Memphis Bass Pro, and making it double
strange is the fact that the store itself is a 32-story stainless steel pyramid.
The giant pyramid is hard to miss.
The building itself is about two-thirds the height of the Pyramids of Giza, and the base
is about the size of three Walmarts.
It is the first thing you see driving into Memphis on Interstate 40.
On one side you have, you know, glass office towers, typical downtown stuff, and then the
other side, WAM, giant pyramid, covered in reflective stainless steel panels and a Bass
Pro logo that's over 75
feet tall.
I went to check out the pyramid earlier this year, and for journalism purposes, I actually
stayed inside a hotel connected to the pyramid.
It's rustically called the Big Cypress Lodge.
My room had three pieces of taxidermy and no windows, unless you count this little deck area that overlooks the sales floor.
It's got two chairs, two rocking chairs, mosquito netting, in case mosquitoes come in from the Bass Pro Shop, I guess.
I would look out onto the bustling store and then stare in awe at the spire of this giant pyramid, hundreds of feet up.
The Memphis pyramid hasn't always been a Bass Pro.
35 years ago, civic leaders in Memphis
had a totally different plan for it,
and it's had a few tenants over the years
before becoming a woodsy mall.
The story of the Great American Pyramid
is long and completely bizarre,
and its trajectory shows how, in architecture and urban planning, the life of a building
can be impossible to predict.
It might sound ridiculous to build a pyramid in modern times, let alone building one in
a major American city.
But for the past 200 years, every Western power has borrowed design ideas from ancient Egypt.
After the French invasion of Egypt in 1798, where you can see a lot of influence in architecture, art, furnishings and so forth.
Dr. Chris Elliott is an Egyptologist who is currently a visiting fellow at the University
of Southampton.
He says you could see Egyptian designs everywhere in the architecture and the monuments of Western
Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries.
I mean I'm fond of paraphrasing the famous lines from Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.
You know, it appears that any nation in possession of an empire
must be in want of an obelisk.
That trend was called Egyptomania,
and it jumped over to America in the 19th century.
Designers were putting sphinx heads on chairs
and designing public buildings with faux Egyptian accents.
I think part of this was showing
that you weren't just Nouveau-Riche.
You were traveled, you were educated,
you had taste as well.
You can also see Egyptomania in public buildings
like courthouses and city halls
that are made to look Egyptian.
The Washington Monument,
that's just one big old Egyptian obelisk.
The city of Memphis, Tennessee is perhaps the peak of this trend.
Memphis was named after the capital of ancient Egypt,
and the city's founders picked the name because Memphis, Tennessee
is nestled beside America's most powerful river, the Mississippi.
There's this long-standing tradition of the Mississippi as the American Nile.
Apart from anyone else, Abraham Lincoln actually used that metaphor. tradition of the Mississippi as the American Nile,
apart from anyone else, Abraham Lincoln
actually used that metaphor.
So naturally the city of Memphis needed its own big,
ancient Egyptian attraction.
Obelisk was kind of taken because,
you know, the Washington Monument.
So instead they went with a pyramid.
A wooden pyramid was constructed in 1897 to represent the city at the Centennial Fair
in Nashville.
The wooden pyramid wasn't used for anything after the fair, so they tore it down.
But a local artist revived the pyramid idea about a half a century later.
In the 1950s, this artist named Mark Harts drew up a plan for three pyramids.
This is Martha Park, a local author and illustrator who has written about the Memphis Pyramid.
They would be bronze colored along the riverfront and they would be like two-thirds the size
of the pyramids in Giza.
The trio of bronze pyramids were never built, but over the years, the idea of a permanent
gigantic pyramid
for downtown Memphis stuck around,
especially among civic leaders who wanted outsiders
to think of Memphis for something other
than Elvis and the blues.
I think it's this kind of attempt to have this like
monolithic representation of the city,
like the bean in Chicago, the arch in St. Louis,
it will just mean Memphis to other people's brains.
For years, the pyramid was just this quirky, unrealized civic project. But in the mid-80s,
the planets finally lined up. The city needed a new downtown landmark. The college basketball
team, the Memphis Tigers, were selling out all of their home games, and they needed a bigger arena. At the same time, it was the
peak of postmodernism in American architecture. Cities all over the US
were commissioning buildings that borrowed details from Greece, ancient Rome,
and yes, ancient Egypt. So city and county officials formed a public building
authority and announced they would spend $39 million on a brand new basketball arena in the shape of a giant pyramid.
The Memphis Building Authority chose to construct the pyramid with stainless steel instead of
bronze, and it picked a location in the city's historic Pinch District.
Pinch was a name from the Irish settlers that came in from the Irish potato famine in the 1860s.
The Pinch Gut District, because their stomachs had the pinched in look like a skinny man.
That's Jimmy Ogle. He used to be the official historian for Shelby County, which includes Memphis.
He says the Pinch District had gone through waves of immigration,
before it was basically cut in half by a highway in the 1960s.
It was after urban renewal, but all that was going on in the 60s with the urban renewal
of all cities, and we called it urban removal in a lot of ways.
City leaders felt the pyramid could help rejuvenate the economy and bring more people into downtown
Memphis.
Plus, there was this big tract of land in the Pinch right alongside the Mississippi
River, the fabled Nile of America.
In 1988, the city and county voted to build the pyramid
in the Pinch District with public money.
The arena would give the neighborhood a shot in the arm.
It would give the Tigers another 10,000 seats,
and it would give the city the pyramid-shaped monolith
it had always dreamed of.
A unique aspect of the pyramid shape
is that it would have a lot of unused space around
the arena, and all this space attracted a couple of enterprising businessmen.
A local entrepreneur named John Tigrett helped convince the city to build the pyramid, partly
because he wanted to help run it.
Tigrett was famous for owning the patent on the drinky duck toy that bobs up and down
in a glass of water, among other more serious business ventures. But in the 1980s, he saw
the pyramid as a great opportunity.
Tigrit was interested in building some attractions inside the building. To help with this, Tigrit
recruited another businessman named Sidney Schlanker.
Schlanker had helped open the Astrodome in Houston, and he was the owner of the Denver
Nuggets basketball team. He was a crazy bastard. He couldn't finish his first idea before starting
the second. Russ Simons was the general manager of the Memphis Pyramid in the early 90s, and he says
Sidney Schlanker was a very enthusiastic salesman.
He was a genius. He had to be, you know, probably just below Barnum in terms of his ability to sell.
I'd put him a half step below P.T. Barnum. Yeah.
Tigran and Schlinker struck a deal with the city. Basically, the city and county would construct
the pyramid with public funds, and the businessmen would install $20 million worth of attractions throughout the building.
Schlanker had a ton of ideas for the pyramid, many of which are summed up in this handy
promotional video.
A new pyramid is being built, not to glorify death, but as a monument that will celebrate life
and man's indomitable spirit to create, to achieve a greatness that will reach to the stars
and span centuries. A greatness that will save. Feel the power of the great American pyramid."
I can't play this whole video because it's like 14 minutes long, but here's a quick
summary.
A narrator claims the pyramid would include attractions for the whole family, like a music
hall of fame, a hard rock cafe, the world's largest transistor radio, and, sure, why not,
a laser show.
And just as the pyramids of old pull our thoughts to Egyptian culture, so too will this new
pyramid be a calling card for the best of American civilization.
The pyramid would also feature a state-of-the-art funicular called the inclinator.
The inclinator was supposed to be an elevator running on a 45 degree incline along the inside
of the building.
With the inclinator, tourists could travel to an observation deck and marvel at the Mississippi
River below.
The hype was very strong.
The video even compared the pyramid to some of the greatest wonders of the world, like
the Sydney Opera House and the Arc de Triomphe, and even the
Pyramids of Giza. Then it suggests the pyramid will probably be better than all of those
other things.
The way that they have it come up from the bottom of the screen and then overtake the
picture of the Pyramids of Giza from behind it is like, forget all you know about pyramids,
baby.
I cannot overstate how much stuff was being promised here. The Memphis pyramid would be
a totally unique building, an arena, and a museum, and a theme park, and a big elevator,
and like a dozen other things.
The vision for the pyramid, I'll just say was extraordinary.
If that vision had been able to be brought to life, it would have been unlike anything else in the world.
The city began construction on the pyramid in 1989.
Well, the two businessmen drew up plans for what to put inside.
Tigrit and Schlanker told the public they were going to spend millions of dollars on the pyramid and the surrounding neighborhood.
But it slowly became clear that their plans weren't the most realistic, at least not
at the scale they had promised.
Schlinker commissioned the inclinator, but he didn't have enough money to mount it
on the side of the building, and it was abandoned.
Pretty soon, their struggles became obvious to the people of Memphis.
If you talk to people in Memphis about Sidney Schlinker, it's very like, Schlinker.
You know, it's like this kind of Newman kind of pronunciation.
In the end, Schlinker and Tigrit had a public falling out.
Their pyramid company filed for bankruptcy, and the city took them off the project altogether.
The pyramid's construction was finished in 1991.
The actual building was completed without Tigrit and Schlinker, because the construction
that was largely paid for by public money.
When the pyramid opened, it was the largest pyramid in America, and by some estimates
the sixth largest pyramid on Earth.
But the project was over budget, costing the public $65 million
instead of $39 million.
And it didn't have any theme parks or laser shows or even the famed Inclinator.
In the end, it was just an arena.
The pyramid opened to great fanfare in November 1991.
But it was clear there were some unusual kinks to work out.
Take for example, what happened on opening night
when country music legends, Naomi and Winona Judd
played a concert to launch the new venue.
Russ Simons was the general manager at the time.
And he says one aspect of the building
that wasn't ready on opening night was the plumbing system.
The pyramid sits below grade,
sits right on the level of the river.
The plumbing designer had, we were supposed to have two, 3000 gallon per minute lift stations
to lift...
Look, there's a very technical explanation for all this, but basically the toilets overflowed
and immediately flooded the building.
The stage had to be sandbagged to stop water from getting into the electrical equipment. Russ remembers how despite all this,
the Judds heroically got on stage
and they still did their show.
So myself and our head of guest experience, Rick Ferdette,
we used a fireman carry to lift Naomi
and Winona Judd to the stage.
They had carried their shoes.
They got on the stairs, they got their shoes on, sort of told me
good luck, and they got up there and brought the house lights down and played their show from
beginning to end. We lost a lot of shoes that night. Ross and his team managed to get things
cleaned up and they fixed the plumbing, but there was another challenge to using the pyramid as a
concert venue. Most arenas are optimized for sound.
By contrast, a pyramid shape is less than ideal for concerts.
Here's Martha Park.
The point at the top of the pyramid,
it's like all the sound goes straight up, doesn't disperse,
and then just goes, boom, and bounces back down to you.
Like acoustically, there's nowhere for the sound to go,
except just back and forth.
And December was Van Halen,
that's when they figured out they didn't have enough acoustics
in the building and it was just a nightmare,
like having a concert in a racquetball court.
It's just a terrible sound.
After the construction hype and the toilet flood
and the big echo, within a few weeks,
the pyramid started to
find its footing.
Russ Simons says his team added more soundbaffling, and Memphians came out in droves.
Of course to see concerts, but also the arena's major draw.
College basketball.
Here is an exterior look at this stainless steel and glass beauty that now is dominating
the skyline and certainly
the drive along the river here it holds just over 20,000 and every seat is filled tonight.
In 1992 the college basketball team the Memphis Tigers were led by a young
phenom named Penny Hardaway. They made the NCAA tournament, and their success
drew rabid fans to the new stadium, which they nicknamed the Tomb of Doom.
The pyramid became a place to be in Memphis. The Tigers had great crowds, and the arena
drew in big names for concerts like Bruce Springsteen and the Grateful Dead. And later,
a prize fight between Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis.
After a few years, the management team even started booking events in the unused space,
but on a smaller scale than what was imagined by Schlinker and Tigrit.
They booked an exhibition of artifacts from the Titanic, and yes, a display of treasures
from ancient Egypt.
Okay, sure.
The Luxor Casino in Las Vegas took away its crown as
biggest pyramid in America in 1993, but that didn't matter. All in all, it seemed like the
pyramid was becoming a success. I wish I could say this is how the story ends.
With the pyramid, in spite of everything, rising in a blaze of steel and fiberglass and ancient Egyptian
kitsch to become Memphis's beloved sports arena, living happily ever after.
Of course, this is not what happened next.
Basketball had made the Memphis pyramid, and a decade later, basketball nearly destroyed
it.
Civic leaders in Memphis had always wanted a big league sports franchise, and in 2001,
they finally got their chance.
Well, the team's been in the league six years, and in that time, the Vancouver Grizzlies
won 98 games.
They lost another 352.
So an announcement today that it's applied to move to an American city comes as no surprise.
The Vancouver Grizzlies were the worst team in the NBA, and the city of Vancouver never
showed up to the games.
In 2001, on short notice, the owner of the Grizzlies decided to move them out of Canada
and into the U.S.
And with that, the Memphis Grizzlies were born.
Though in the great tradition of the Utah Jazz, the name did not make a lot of geographic sense. This franchise came from Vancouver. That's why we're
named the Grizzlies. Where's a grizzly bear around here, you know? The Grizzlies
played their first three seasons in the pyramid, but the NBA made it clear that
the pyramid could not be a long-term home for the Grizzlies because it simply
wasn't up to NBA standards.
Basketball arenas were sort of undergoing this evolution.
Here's Zach McMillan.
He covered basketball for the Memphis Commercial Appeal.
Zach says in the early 2000s, the business of sports in North America went through a
rapid change.
You were moving from a time when the point of a basketball arena was to get as many people as you could into the seats, balance supply and demand as best you could.
Maybe within five or six years, if you built a new arena, you really put an emphasis on
the luxury suites.
You wanted people paying premium prices to rent out those suites.
And that's really how you could create the business model
to make it work.
Basketball in North America was becoming a big money sport.
And that came with a lot of expectations.
Arenas needed luxury boxes.
They also needed fancy modern training facilities
and a massive digital scoreboard and spacious locker rooms
and lots of things the Memphis Pyramid lacked.
So the Grizzlies' ownership made a fateful choice. They decided the pyramid wasn't
worth the hassle. A new arena was built using public money, and the FedEx Forum opened
in 2004. It became the new home for the Grizzlies, and to add insult to injury, it was clearly
visible from the
pyramid.
The new arena was much more conventional than the pyramid.
For starters, it was actually arena-shaped.
The fact that it's fun and it's a building that works well and the acoustics aren't
maddening and stuff like that.
Soon, the Memphis Tigers also moved to the Forum, and major concerts started getting
booked there too.
There was still an occasional show at the Tomb of Doom, but in 2007, Bob Seeger played
the last concert ever held there.
The Memphis Pyramid went from being a center of civic life to having zero tenants and zero
prospects.
While a pyramid is famously a very stable shape, there are good reasons they don't
show up all that much in modern architecture.
For example, pyramids just don't use vertical space very efficiently.
Anyway, a few ideas were proposed for the Memphis Pyramid, but nothing seemed like an obvious fit.
It could have been a museum. Like, you could have put attractions in there.
But at the end of the day, why would you want to own the whole thing?
Clearly it never made sense to anybody.
The pyramid was no longer useful
and it was a target for negative press,
including attention from a very confused,
very misinformed, very malicious radio host.
Thanks to radio talk show conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, the empty arena is again in the
national spotlight as a cornerstone of one of his rants against the occult.
And you can see the Memphis pyramid built back in the early 1990s.
In classic Alex Jones fashion, this conspiracy wasn't really based on anything except a
misreading of some internet rumors.
By 2008, the pyramid laid off all of their employees, except for one guy. Basically,
a lighthouse keeper, just there to oversee the place.
Soon all the pyramid was being used for was one-off stuff,
like firefighter training.
So now you have this big old 20,000 seat,
321 foot tall pyramid,
and a neat building that you can't put anything in.
It seemed like the great American pyramid
had become the city's great folly.
Nobody wanted to knock it down, but nobody wanted to move in either.
That is, until someone took up residence and completely transformed the space.
This is a live look. Construction is well underway at the pyramid in downtown Memphis to turn the former Tomb of Doom into one of the largest Bass Pro shops in the country.
In 2010, the hunting and fishing store Bass Pro Shops announced a plan to buy the pyramid and use
it as their flagship location, which turned out to be the biggest Bass Pro shop in America. The city
of Memphis was more than happy to lease to Bass Pro because they were thrilled that anyone was interested in taking over the property.
In 2015, the new store dubbed Bass Pro Shops
at the Pyramid was opened.
Now look, it doesn't make a lot of obvious sense
to take a giant pyramid-shaped basketball arena
and to make it into an outdoorsy amusement park slash store,
but when you think about it,
nothing really makes sense for this building.
Ultimately to me, I think the pyramid was a really absurd plan and that the Bass Pro
just happens to feel like just absurd enough to work when other things were maybe too serious.
Legend has it that Bass Pro bought the pyramid because their CEO, Johnny Morris, was on a fishing expedition that caught a 30 pound catfish on the Mississippi River, which he saw as a good omen.
While I have a lot of questions about this story, Morris and Bass Pro did not respond to my request for an interview.
But there's another less magical reason Bass Pro probably wanted this space. Memphis, Tennessee is close to some of the nation's best hunting and fishing spots.
When you think about it, you got the Mississippi River right there. And 70% of the migratory
waterfowl fly from Canada down through this waterway here, the Mississippi Waterway. So
over here in Stuttgart, Arkansas, 60 miles to our east, is the duck calling championships
each year. The ducking capital of the world.
When I visited the pyramid earlier this year, I was pretty into it.
I loved taking rides on the pyramid's
ludicrously tall elevator,
though I have to tell you, it's a regular vertical elevator.
They never ended up building the inclinator.
On the elevator, visitors are regaled
by a recording from a local TV fishing legend,
who tells the story of Johnny Morris' party catching that fortuitous catfish.
Hello everybody, I'm Bill Danics. Did you know that you're taking a ride on the nation's tallest freestanding elevator?
This elevator and everything you see when you look down would never have happened had it not been for one big old Mississippi River blue cat.
One day, my dear friend...
The elevator takes visitors up to the spire of the pyramid,
which overlooks the Mississippi River
from the vantage of a glass-bottomed observation deck.
It's all pretty spectacular.
And at first, I was having a lot of fun.
But on my second day, my mood started to turn.
Hunched over my desk, under the watchful gaze of two taxidermy deer heads, a melancholy crept in.
I realized I hadn't seen daylight for 16 hours, and to leave the building, I'd have to cross a sea of parking lots and walk under a highway to get anywhere.
I started to feel a little wistful. I can go kind of dark about the Bass Pro Shop with the fake cypress trees when it's like,
you know, most of the bottomland hardwood forests in this area have been destroyed and
there's not a lot of cypress trees just hanging out, you know, that there would have been.
And to come into this place and it's dark and there's these fake cypress trees, it
just can make me feel kind of sad. I got to thinking about how this place was pitched as a project with so many civic virtues,
an arena that would also host museums and redevelop a historic neighborhood.
Instead, its fate was to become a mall.
I have to say, though, talking to Memphians about this, most of them did not share the concern.
They were pretty happy about how the pyramid turned out.
The ones that wanted to have problems with it do.
People that don't like something,
want to have problems, want to fuss about it, yeah.
They're gonna have problems with anything.
Jimmy Ogle thinks complaints like this one
are missing the bigger point.
Because what exactly was the alternative for the pyramid?
This is a drain on the city if it left Fankit.
What can you do to get the private sector involved?
So these are private dollars, private accounts,
so it's the stimulus jobs, all the other stuff,
tax revenues.
The Bass Pro has become a tourist magnet,
bringing in millions of people a year.
In a way, it's now fulfilling its original promise.
Totally safe environment, enclosed, a wonderland of outdoor things.
It's just a kid's eyes just pop out of their heads when they go out on that floor.
The people I spoke to are largely at peace with how everything turned out.
I was surprised to discover even my Egyptologist seemed pretty cool with it.
Here's Chris Elliott again.
I suppose the simplest way I can put it is to say that it makes me happy that the pyramid
is still there. How many pyramids of this size have you got in the United States? Not
enough, I think, to just sort of casually dismiss it.
Many urbanists agree with this, and they say the Memphis Pyramid is a success story.
The pyramid has become this place of rebirth, an abandoned building that has found new life
despite formidable odds.
But it's also a place of death.
Of course, an Egyptian pyramid is a tomb, and the Memphis Pyramid, it represents the
death of intention.
I guess when I think about the pyramid, what I think it means is that any attempt you have
at creating a space to project a single story is ultimately going to fail, and that what
might work better is letting the world come in instead and letting you know what that
space could mean, and to be open to a space telling a different story of itself than the one you expected.
The Memphis Pyramid is proof that no matter what architects and planners and dreamers
envision for a place, ultimately, every building has to find its own way.
In 1991, Russ Simons made a shocking discovery at the top of the Memphis pyramid.
We'll tell you about that after this. And we are back with Chris Berube.
Hey Chris.
Hey Roman.
So Roman, I have to tell you about a footnote in the saga of the Memphis Pyramid.
So you remember we talked about a guy named John Tigrit in the story?
Yeah, of course.
He was one of the businessmen who wanted to run all the attractions beneath the bleachers of the pyramid.
That's right. So I bring him up because actually I want to talk about John Tigrit's son for a second.
Okay.
Okay. So John had a son named Isaac Tigrit, who was famous, among other things, for co-creating the Hard Rock Cafe back in the 1970s.
Of the ubiquitous t-shirt fame, Hard Rock Cafe.
That's exactly the one, yes.
So he's a really interesting character.
Like Isaac Tigrit, you know, created the Hard Rock Cafe,
famously traveled across America
on his own rail car for a while.
There's just so much going on in this guy's biography.
It's really interesting.
That's remarkable, okay.
So when the pyramid was being built, John Tigrit, one of his promises was he was going to bring in his son Isaac
to put a hard rock cafe in the pyramid, right? And that never ended up happening. But the
son, Isaac Tigrit, he did put something else in the pyramid. So Isaac had access while
it was being built. And when nobody was looking, he snuck in and he went up to the top of the pyramid
and he hid a good luck charm in the rafters
and he never told anybody.
Oh, a good luck charm.
Okay, tell me about it.
So Roman, this whole thing is gonna blow your mind.
Like everything else with the pyramid,
it's the wildest of possibilities.
So I heard this story from Russ Simons,
who you may remember was the former general manager of the pyramid in the 90s.
Isaac Tigrit got a group of people together.
Somehow co-opted a security guard and they took ladders and welding the same color as the steel,
and they welded it, and it was like directly in the center
of how the pyramid comes together.
So Russ is running the pyramid,
he's doing management stuff, and you know,
he looks around and he notices this box,
and he's thinking like, okay, that shouldn't be there.
Like, what is this?
I got my workers and Sawzall's and our equipment, all that, and ladders.
We traipsed up those steps and we went and we knocked the welds off and we brought the box down.
So Russ and his team, they take down this box. They have no idea. Isaac Tigert has put it there.
And they're thinking like, is this dangerous? Like, what is this mystery box?
So the first thing they do is they actually call the city
and the county who are like, we'll send some representatives
over, so everybody gathers around, they're looking
at this box and they all decide, okay, look,
let's just open it up and let's just see what's inside.
We brought the crew in and we knocked the cover
off the box.
So Russ says he and his crew were opening it
and inside the box, there is the box. So Russ says he and his crew were opening it and inside the box there is another box.
And the second box, it's velvet.
And the second box was not a normal box,
it was more like a puzzle box, like you had to
flip a bunch of switches and stuff to get it open.
The box opened by swinging the sides out and up
and all of that, and then the box opened,
and when we opened the box, a whole bunch of gray powder came out, right?
And everybody's like, oh man, what is that?
So people are, you know, clearing out this gray powder,
the dust is settling, and then they look
and inside the box they see a crystal skull.
Huh, sorry, what?
So it's a crystal skull, it's about the size of a fist,
looks expensive, it's like, I guess the best comparison, Roman, have you seen a bottle of Dan Ackroyd's vodka
before?
No, I can't say I've had the pleasure.
Well, I mean, look, he sells vodka and a crystal skull.
It's not terribly complicated.
Anyway, okay, so nobody knows what to make of this.
They're like, what is this?
So it turns out Isaac Tigrit had put it up there,
apparently on the advice of a religious guru he was following who told him it would bring
good luck to the pyramid. I have to be honest, the details on this are a little sketchy.
I reached out to Isaac Tigrit to talk about the story. He did not get back to me. I'm
sure he gets requests about this all the time, but after this, they weren't sure what to
do with the skull. So it ended up in a vault in the Shelby County administration office.
And Isaac Tiger gets wind of this and actually through his mother, he managed
to broker a deal and in the end, he got the skull back from the county.
Wow.
This is so dramatic.
Oh yeah.
I mean, it's like everything in this story.
It is just very dramatic.
So of course the media gets ahold of this, right?
And they publish a bunch of stories with headlines like Crystal Skull found at the pyramids, you know, belongs to Isaac Tigrit. And you may remember Alex Jones
was involved with all this. He had said the pyramid was demonic. And this is the reason
why. It's because he heard about the Crystal Skull and that's the reason it became the
center of this conspiracy theory. Joan's so-called facts are mostly slanderous in the internet video entitled,
Devil Pyramid Rotting in Memphis, but at least one of his statements is true. A crystal skull
was discovered. Like everything with the Memphis Pyramid,
it's a completely unexpected twist and turn in the story. I got to say, this is definitely one of
the more unpredictable ones I've ever covered for the show. I gotta say, this is definitely one of the more unpredictable ones
I've ever covered for the show.
I love it. Well, thank you so much, Chris,
and thank you for venturing out to Memphis.
So I grew up in Memphis, so this is very exciting for me
to hear more about Memphis. So thank you.
It's my pleasure. I hope I did your hometown justice
with the story, Robert.
You certainly did.
You certainly did.
99% Invisible was produced this week by Chris Barupe, edited by Kelly Prime, fact-checking by Laura Bollins,
mixed by Martin Gonzalez, music by Swan Real, and Jamila Sendoto Sinai, with Mia Byrne playing lap steel.
Special thanks this week to Lewis Graham, Harry Diamet, Zach McMillan, Yang Yi, Tom Jones and all the delightful folks
that Chris spoke to at the Memphis pyramid.
Our executive producer is Cathy Tu,
our senior editor is Delaney Hall,
the digital director is Kurt Kohlstedt.
The rest of the team includes Jason De Leon,
Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson,
Vivian Lay, Lashma Dawn, Jacob Medina Gleason,
Joe Rosenberg, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% of his logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the SiriusXM podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north in the
Pandora building in beautiful Uptown, Oakland, California.
You can find us on Blue Sky as well as our own Discord server.
If you enjoyed this episode, there's going to be a special bonus episode all about Memphis,
Tennessee later this week.
You can find it in our podcast feed or at our website, 99pi.org.