Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Cautionary Tales Presents: World's Greatest Con
Episode Date: April 29, 2022We'll be back with another story of human error next week, but today we're sharing another podcast you might like. On World's Greatest Con, Brian Brushwood talks about the most audacious con jobs, swi...ndles, and heists in history. In this episode of World's Greatest Con, Brian tells the story of how a game show producer was tempted into upping the ante on his own program by feeding answers to the contestants. Those contestants become rich, famous, and admired...until the scheme is discovered and all they are left with is shame. You can hear more episodes by searching for World's Greatest Con wherever you get podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
Tim Haafard here. This week, cautionary tales hands the microphone to Brian Brushwood, host
of World's Greatest Con, a show about the most audacious con jobs, swindles and heists
in history. The events you'll hear about are a quintessential
cautionary tale, a story of how a game show producer was tempted into upping the ante on
his own programme by feeding answers to the contestants. Those contestants become stars,
rich, famous, admired, and then the scheme is discovered. And all they're left with is shame.
I love World's Greatest Con, both this second season, which is all about
frauds and cons perpetrated on or by TV quiz shows, such as Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,
The Price Is Right, Press Your Luck, and more. And the first season, which was about an astonishing attempt
to Khan Adolf Hitler himself.
It's packed with the storytelling, the human psychology and the salientry lessons you
expect from cautionary tales.
If you're not already a subscriber, take a moment to subscribe now and you can thank me
later.
Brian Brushwood, the host of World's Greatest Con, also hosts
TV shows on Discovery and National Geographic, is an international lecturer on scams and is an
absolute pleasure to listen to. And I'll be back at the helm of cautionary tales this time next week
with a new story of human error, but until then, over to Brian Brushwood and World's Greatest Con.
But, until then, over to Brian Brushwood and World's Greatest Con. This is World's Greatest Con.
I'm Brian Brushwood.
Alright, it's 1957 and 200 people are getting pulled into a grand jury.
They're all told the same thing.
Tell the truth, you'll be on your way. But if you lie, you are going to be indicted on federal perjury charges.
And these people aren't just anyone.
We're talking about lawyers, professors, active military, respected individuals,
people with a lot to lose if their reputations are tarnished.
And fascinatingly, one by one,
these individuals go to the grand jury
and the overwhelming majority lie.
They commit federal perjury.
I mean, maybe it's some money, right?
Money's gotta be involved somewhere.
But they lie for the money.
Maybe it's a grand conspiracy.
They're all in.
If one person cracks, everything comes down.
A cult?
I mean, hell, that'd make more sense than the truth.
Because the truth is the real reason
is something elemental in every single one of us,
something hardwired into our brains. The truth is the real reason is something elemental in every single one of us, something
hardwired into our brains.
All of us have a relationship with this, and it's a con man's job to exploit it.
I'm going to tell you an epic story about fame and shame, about how our desire for one
and the fear of the other
can eradicate your morals.
Reduce you to a pawn on somebody else's chessboard.
But before we get to the heavy stuff,
let's understand this phenomenon in a safer sandbox
or realm without any victims.
OK, this will be a weird segue. But have you ever
been to a stage hypnotist show? Sometimes these shows are like at a Christmas event for our
corporation. Sometimes you'll buy a ticket on the strip in Las Vegas. I always see them at these
college freshman orientations. You know, those big events they do in the first one or two days when you come to campus,
when they want you to bond together as a cohort and have shared experience.
It's the perfect activity to get people to reveal stuff about themselves.
In fact, put yourself back there. You don't know anybody. You don't know
how any of this is going to go, but you do know that you want to fit in. There's a thousand
other people in this packed, charged auditorium. You're excited. They're excited. You want
to know them. They want to know you. How walks a guy, an authoritative suit, who explains to you that
only one type of person can be hypnotized, smart person.
It's about smart enough to exactly follow directions on Q.
And no, you won't lose free will.
But yes, you will experience something that you will remember for the rest of your life,
and then comes the first part of how stage hypnosis works.
He asks, who here in this room would like to be hypnotized?
This feels like a very small moment, it's not. It's the most important moment.
The reason it's the most important moment is because you are self-selecting or compliance.
You are entering a contract.
You are saying I am ready to play.
Do you and 45 other freshmen go running up to the stage?
You all get in the line.
And what happens first is a very small ask.
The stage hypnotist says,
I want you to imagine
you're getting very, very hot.
Oh, what must that be like to be very, very hot?
And of course you are hot.
You're under a bunch of heat lamps.
You're on stage.
You're next to all these other sweaty bodies.
You just ran a hundred meters to get up here.
After a few minutes of this, a language changes just a little bit.
Now he just says, now you're getting cooler.
But you know what he's talking about, right?
I was hot now, I'm getting cooler.
Of course, of course.
Also by the way, you are actually getting cooler.
You worked up a sweat while you were up there on stage. Now all that sweat is starting to evaporate. You're getting
cooler so you begin to shake and shiver, cover yourself.
And all the while, he's quietly eliminating people. He doesn't say elimination. What
he says is, if I tap you on the shoulder, it just didn't work out.
It was not really a punishment, but you know what you want. You know you want to stay up there
on stage. You want to keep going. We hear directives and sleep. And we know, while we're up there
on stage, what he means is, act as though you just went into a slumber,
elect your thoughts.
And you begin to watch as stranger and stranger things happen around you, always happening
to other people.
Something amazing is about to happen.
Person I'm touching right now, only the person I'm touching right now, in a moment, I'm
going to ask you a question.
And when I do, you will be unable to remember the number seven.
But when he asks you to add together
or in four, you say eight, it's like great.
So you must have eight fingers pointed up.
Go ahead and count them.
One, two, three, four, five, six.
Ugh.
What else are you gonna do?
And meanwhile, the audience is loving it.
A laughter, the applause.
I mean, you think of yourself as an introvert.
You've never experienced anything like this.
But right now, the attention is on you
and you are in full-on flow state.
It melts all of these decisions about whether you're playing along
or just following instructions. they all get blended together.
Choices become instinctual.
The age of 18 of freshman at college, you've probably never experienced anything like this
before.
All you know is that it feels awesome.
And when this dude tells you something to do,
you do it, everybody claps, and you feel great.
And then 40 minutes into the performance.
He says to you, out loud,
you are Britney Spears.
And you have a choice because the hypnotist didn't lie.
You do have free will.
You could do anything you want at any moment.
But you also know that of any two options,
you want the one that's less painful.
And in that moment, it would be more painful to stop the show.
To say, this has been a wild ride, but I'm afraid I'm outside of my comfort zone.
I'm just going to head on down back to my seat.
What's less painful is that you are Britney Spears. Every sexy bump and grind.
Touching your body in a ways that you wouldn't even do a load in the bathroom.
Everybody cheering, screaming.
It's an ecstasy of improvisation that you've never experienced in your entire lives.
Good God! The whole world stopped and shown a spotlight on you.
It's calorie-free fame.
There's no way you can lose. You'll be rewarded if your dancing is good.
You'll be blameless if it's bad. The reliability of these reactions to fame and shame, that's what allows stage hypnotists
to make a living doing this.
Yes, hypnosis is a real phenomenon, but stage hypnosis is a different animal.
And everybody on that stage were acting the way that they did for fame.
The folks that stayed up there the longest did so
out of fear that they would be eliminated
and the shame that would come from that.
Last season, we explained how common con man tactics were used
to defeat Hitler of all people by the 20 committee.
So this season will do one better. The biggest scandal in television history,
the downfall of the TV quiz show, 21.
21 is so popular that a winning contestant is an instant celebrity.
Overnike their household name, and along with that comes money, money that you can
use for yourself and your loved ones.
But as it broadcasts, what tens of millions of viewers at home don't know is that most
of the winners are in the process of making a deal with the devil.
Each of them are crossing an ethical line that will eventually eradicate the reputation
long after the fame and the money are gone.
All in the service of producers were playing a much more high stakes game.
If you were told you were about to make more money in one night than you'd make it an
entire year, that everyone in your block would hail you as a hero.
That you could have a future in television.
All you had to do was step in line and play along.
All you had to do was cheat.
What would you do?
Don't say it out loud just yet. First, put yourself in a soundproof booth.
On live, national television.
With 50 million people watching and answer this,
how many points would you like to play for?
Cons don't fool us because we're stupid.
They fool us because we're stupid. They fool us because we're human.
And this might be the world's greatest con.
You're listening to World's Greatest Con on cautionary tales.
Before we get to 21, we've got to talk about the show that it's desperately trying to
take down. Yes, the $64,000 question.
And now, the star of our show, where Nullage's king and the reward, king size,
how much?
Alright, let's start here.
Television is a killer-be-killed business.
Everybody's got an idea, and most people could pull it off if at their surrounded with the right talent, but even at its earliest moments, television is about
getting those eyeballs, a connection to the viewer. There's no denying that in 1956, the
viewer is connecting with the $64,000 question. It is the first major hit game show on TV.
And yes, the game show format has been around since radio, but now you can actually see the
contestants. You can see what they look like, how they fidgeted under the pressure or rocked it
confidently straight through the answers. Also, remember where we are.
This is the 1950s.
Boys have come home from World War II.
More of them came home from Korea.
Prosperity is the name of the game.
Everybody's home and they want to make an empire for themselves.
Some meant is being poured on the suburbs that would go on to define American culture
for the next 70 years and counting.
And the game show embodies all of that.
Average people who want to make good, testing their own knowledge, winning big money, big
prizes.
Remember grandma's couch, one that had the plastic cover all over it?
There was a day that Couch was brand new.
Let's go back to that day and let's sit on that couch.
And let's turn on the TV and watch the $64,000 question.
For the third week, honor client of the $64,000 question
is our psychologist from New York City,
he's category is boxing, Dr. Joyce Brothers.
Finally, what man, later famous in the boxing world, refereed the comeback attempt of
an ex-champ against Jack Johnson at Reno Nevada.
Text Rickard.
You're right.
Text Steve Paul the Honest.
And how fifties is this?
First off, yes, that is the Dr. Joyce brothers that you know and love.
This is how she got famous.
But one of the first big winners on $64,000 question is Catherine Kreitzer, in which she answers
a series of questions about Bible verses.
Here's what's important about Catherine.
See, $64,000 question was kind of like who wants to be a millionaire.
You have to answer a series of questions leading up to the big prize.
And every when you get, you have a chance to walk away.
Catherine hits that moment.
She has a chance to be the first $64,000 winner by answering one question, but she doesn't.
Given the opportunity to walk with 34,000 or risk everything,
she takes the money.
This is a really crucial part of the story
and really of every con.
Always value the money you have.
It's your money.
That's why you gotta be careful to not covet the money you don't you have. It's your money. That's why you got to be careful to not covet the money you
don't yet have. $64,000 question is on CBS. If you click down the dial, NBC is getting covetous of
those ratings. They try to buy the $64,000 question. They fail. They look to make their own.
Enter, Dan, and write.
And An write was born in 1917.
grew up in British Palestine and New York City. And write was a revolutionary mind.
And we're not just talking game shows, it's all kinds of audience participation shows,
shows where somebody from the audience tells an interesting story, and boom, they're reunited
with their long lost sister.
Other ones where somebody is down on their luck and they get a new car.
It's part produced, it's part improv.
In 1947, Enright meets the man that would become his creative partner for the rest of his
life.
Stand Up Comic Jack Berry
Together they pitch and produce TV game shows, often ones that use Berry as the MC.
In 1956 they come up with 21.
The one questions are super easy, the 11 questions are often multiple parts and really,
really hard, essentially like blackjack.
Whoever hits 21 first wins.
NBC likes it enough to shoot a practice round.
Perfect, they're in the game.
Oh yeah, 21, it has one major advantage
over the $64,000 question.
See, 64 is massive, and the contestants that make it far,
they become huge stars.
Oh, Bible-quoting Catherine became a downright celebrity!
But if you did the best you could on 64, it only lasted four weeks.
All that hype for a month of ratings?
Who?
At 21.
21 is set up so a winner could go on forever.
Just keep winning and winning.
Did you imagine the publicity?
Imagine the attention?
This is brilliant.
Enright sets up the first test game AND…
It sucks.
It is super boring and here's why.
According to Enrite, either contestant could answer enough of the questions to make 21.
One of the advantages of 64,000 is that the contestants got to pick one topic that they're
an expert in to answer increasingly difficult questions.
21 changes the topic every question.
You have to find real savants.
People are super well-rounded about everything.
What Ant-Rite may or may not know
is that 64,000 also tries to make sure
their contestants succeed.
For example, to the home audience,
the category is just opera.
But the producers know that this guy is really an expert only in Italian opera.
So all of his questions are only about Italian opera.
No Russian opera, no French opera.
So how are you going to get random people to push past a single round, let alone so many
rounds they become huge stars?
I mean, could... Let alone so many rounds they become huge stars.
I mean,
could
cheat.
Let's pause here to consider the ethics of what's about to happen.
Yes, 21 is a TV show. Most TV shows are faked.
Yes, $64,000 question is shaped to help contestants.
But they don't get the questions beforehand.
What end-right is considering is to give the questions, categories, and the answers to
a contestant beforehand.
I mean, what's the harm?
Contestants get money, he gets ratings.
End-right finds out real quick with his first big winner.
He feels a little bit awkward coming out and asking Amanda Cheat.
So when right does something clever, he gives a pre-show quiz to the guy just to loosen
his nerves a bit.
It's only after he's in the booth on live television that the contestant realizes the
practice questions that he already got are in reality the same questions being asked for keeps live on TV.
But what do you do? It's money, right? Wrong.
This contestant felt betrayed and made a fool of.
He's worried about his reputation being branded as a fool of. He's worried about his reputation, being branded as a cheater, he goes to Enrite
and demands to give the money back. Finally, Enrite convinces him to keep it just gracefully
bow out. What do we say? You can't con and honest, John. In another world, this would
have been a wake-up call. In an alternate reality, Enripe would realize
from the reaction of the first winner that a man's reputation means a lot, more than
thousands of dollars. Maybe the contestants shouldn't be treated just like props. Maybe
we can make the questions easier or find another way. Now we're rolling. Despite the contestants' moral panic,
look, the plan worked.
The only mistake is that he surprised the guy
after the fact he's got to be up front.
Enripe needs somebody willing to take the money
for nothing.
Enripe has to find a mark.
What's the most important thing to find?
Meet Herb Stimple.
Herb's a studious guy grew up in Depression era New York.
His father died a young age.
His mother moved the family to a poor area of the Bronx.
And like most able-bodied young men, he enlisted, shipped off to Europe and the army.
After getting back home from the war, he filtered through office posts
in the army. Eventually ended up taking a job as a postal clerk in the Big Apple.
That's where he got married, settled down, and baby. And legitimately, Herb has an insane memory.
As a kid he did this radio quiz show, he remained undefeated for weeks. Picture heard, watching 21.
defeated for weeks. Picture heard watching 21. Saying to himself, these questions are easy. He writes to the producer Dan Anwright, takes a sample
quiz where according to Stemple, he gets 251 of the 363 questions exactly right.
When Anwright sees Stemple, he sees a story.
A new father working his way through community college.
A GI, this is America!
Enright invites Stemple to come to his office for a meeting.
Stemple can't do it because he has to babysit his kid.
So Enright comes to him.
There could be no surprises anymore.
So Enright comes right out and says,
would you like to make $25,000?
Stemple is taken aback, but he knows the score.
In my mind, he's thinking like,
oh, 25 is a lot of money.
Looks over at his kid playing with his toy trucks on the floor.
You mean 25, and I don't even have to steal anything?
Like if the owner of the bank was trying to give me money
just to prove that rich people do business there.
I mean, everybody wins, right?
That's where Anrite has him.
We're gonna find out there's a lot more
than money involved in a deal like this.
And Stemple specifically is going to fight
tooth and nail for it from the Bronx to the halls of Congress.
But for now, the done deal.
$25K, I'll do what you say.
That's my motto.
This time Enright has a partner, so he stage manages Stemple way more than the first
guy.
He gives him every point value he's going to ask for.
Every question he's going to get, every answer he's going to say, right or wrong.
He picks out a suit for Stemple to make him look frumpy and to wear the loudest watch he
owns to heighten the tension.
What do we say?
All the effort into that first impression.
The tablo.
In the first four minutes of the program,
Stemple wins $9,000.
More money in a lump sum than he has ever seen in his entire life.
Stemples take it a big ol' fat bite that forbidden fruit.
He's all in on the belief that this is easy money and he is willing to bend the rules and
conceal the truth from his friends, his family, the rest of the world. At $9,000, that's just the
beginning. Stemple would eventually rack up nearly $70,000 in winnings, $1950 dollars.
And he's got the chance to turn it into $100,000.
Well, I mean, sort of.
See, Enright loves having a return winner, and the press loves having a return winner.
So Stemple becomes a minor New York celebrity, but there's one part of a returning champion
that Enright needs to, let's say, make some adjustments for the money.
See, the sponsor of 21, pharmaceuticals Inc, and their product, Gerrit Hall, they furnished
the show with the limited prize budget.
If the total prize money for those 26 weeks
is less than the money allotted,
then it gets refunded to the sponsor.
But if it's over that number,
well, that comes out of Barry and Enripe productions.
That means the show has to live within its means.
And since Stemple was on his way to getting a big ol' fat paycheck,
that payout simply wasn't feasible.
And here is where the deal with the devil comes due first.
Inwright places in front of Stemple, an agreement.
It's retroactive to the very first appearance
the Stemple made out 21, at night that he won $9,000.
In plain language, it says,
Stemple will agree to take less than his actual winnings on the show at the end of his journey.
If he signs, he agrees to take $40,000 if he lands on anything between 60 and 80k.
50,000 on any earnings between 80 and 100k and 60,000 on anything over 100k.
And right, makes it very clear that he can either sign now or lose very badly and walk with less than the lowest amount offered.
Flashback to that moment, just a few weeks ago, Stemple's apartment is sun running around.
Stemple let money trample his morals.
Now even the money is being taken away.
Stemple's obviously a bit blindsided and right tells him not to worry, hey, Stemple,
you're not just a postal clerk anymore, you're a TV star, and End Wright just happens
to be a TV producer. After Stemples done on 21, you'll be a perfect fit for some other
game show, maybe even a panel show, or he could simply just make money with his wit and
intellect. Who's your boy? Who's Enright's good partner?
Just sign the contract, Stample.
You smart.
You say, oh, you're so smart, Stample.
You're the best.
You're be a TV star.
Stample signs.
And from this point forward,
absolutely nothing goes right for him.
We're back in Inwright's office.
Stemples there again, but this time it's a few weeks later.
Stemple is the champion and his next show he has his chance to cross the line of $100,000.
But that's not going to happen, because Enright has to break some bad news to the kid.
You gotta lose next week.
This is where the ride ends.
Hey, hold on.
Be cool.
Who's your boy?
Stumpy.
Stumpy is not cool. He wants to know exactly who's going to replace him.
And right explains, ah, it's this elegant guy by the name of Charles Van Doren. He's
an actor, a writer, and is this professor at Columbia? I mean, he's from a famous intellectual
family. You know what? enough about Charles Vandorn.
The important thing, Stempi, is that you're going to take a dive.
Well, whoa, whoa, whoa, Stemp says, if Vandorn's from Columbia, Stempel is like from city
college.
What if they have a straight up game?
I mean, don't just make me take a dive, we can play it fair, right?
You could build it up like that rich kid versus poor kid.
Now that's good TV. Stempel is so desperate, he makes an offer. Stemple is willing to bet his entire earnings
on a straight up honest legit game. Now think about this.
The whole reason he took the deal, the whole reason he was the perfect partner to enwrite
is because he was in it for the money.
Boom.
That's out.
For what?
One word.
Fame.
Enright says, no.
Plan is the plan.
The ratings have plateaued and steppel, it's time for new blood.
Oh, and by the way, specifically, you're going to lose on the question, which movie won
Best Picture last year?
You and I both know that the real answer is Marty, but you're going to say on the
waterfront.
This crushes Stemple.
It's this one detail.
It's this one honest fact that is going to live in his brain for decades.
It'll eventually become a beast that consumes him.
Not only does he have to take the dive, he has to humiliate himself in the process.
But hey, who's walking away with $40,000 of negotiated winnings?
Who's gonna maybe be on another one of our shows?
Oh, did I mention who I called today?
I was on the phone with Steve Allen, I'm just saying.
This calms down stemple.
I mean, if nothing else in this moment, he knows for a fact at the very least.
He is a legitimate TV star. Later on, when Stumpel talked about this What motion picture won the Academy Award for 1955?
Later on, when Stupel talked about this moment,
he would say he seriously thought, full on going rogue,
live on TV in that isolation booth.
He could literally say whatever he wanted.
The whole world was watching.
When he was asked which movie one best picture, he really could
just say Marty and win. He could retire with his winnings and walk off the set. By the
way, that's another thing we should point out now that we're at the end of Stemple's
run. Enright effectively controlled him in two ways when it came to the money. The first
was the contract where Enright convinced St convinced Temple to take less money, pennies
on the dollar, but the second was convincing him to keep playing. Much like sweet Bible quote-uncatharan
on $64,000 question, you could just take the money and go. The risk on the other side looks
different. When the producer is promising you the answers. I mean, until he decides to stop giving them to you.
You always have the option to leave no matter what he says, and yet you feel like you don't
want to leave.
You feel like the path of least resistance is to just stay.
I don't remember, I don't remember.
I don't remember.
Do you want to take a guess at it?
It's not, I'll have to pull it wrong, heard.
On the word of friend.
No, I'm sorry, the answer is Marty.
Marty.
You lose five points and put your back down to 11.
Better luck on the next round.
How did that moment play for An Rightrite up in the control room?
Deep inside his head, what's going on?
The Stemple Experiment was a huge leap forward.
The repeat winner idea was money in the bank.
Rating's wise, I mean the problem with Stemple is, yeah, just couldn't break through to
the next level, right?
Woof, was he a bit of a handful?
So neurotic, needy.
Also, that part where I promised him money and then a few weeks later took it away,
that was an elegant.
In this moment, Enripe makes two decisions.
Number one, his hands stay clean.
From now on, all the rigging gets done by somebody whose name is not Enripe.
Number two, you pay the contestants up front.
That way they can't complain when they don't get as much money as is on in right. Number two, you pay the contestants up front. That way they can't complain
when they don't get as much money
as is on the board.
The dollars are just points.
And the new policy begins
with that beautiful intellectual sexy mind
of Charles Van Doren.
He crushes Stemple and immediately becomes a supernova.
Ratings go through the roof, the network is thrilled.
How thrilled? After only 18 weeks on the air, they counter program 21,
directly opposite I love Lucy, and they held their own. Here's a quote from CBS.
quote from CBS. Where?
Sorry.
So much of this is not because of Dan and Wright's genius of feeding answers.
It's because of that beautiful sexy mind of Van Doran.
He checks all of the boxes.
Smart, good family.
White, unmarried, white, artist, white.
Also, he's white.
Did you hear he didn't even own a TV before coming on 21?
How adorable.
But there is a downside.
Because Vandoren is a legit academic, he does have a for real reputation that he wants
to uphold.
I mean, apologies to Stemple in the post office, but the Van Doren family are tied to American
institutions, the Pulitzer Prize and Columbia University.
Had I heard of them, young Charles is close to completing his PhD if he were revealed
as a chief wife, but that simply cannot happen.
As the spotlight grows hotter, Vanandoren begins to have second thoughts, and unlike Stemple,
he makes direct pleas to be allowed to leave the show.
And right says, nope, things are going way too well.
In February of 1957, Vandoren is given the cover of Time magazine.
One month later, he finally gets his wish.
He loses, doing air quotes you can't see him because it's a podcast.
To a young female lawyer, and walks away with $129,000 over a million bucks in today's
money, bigger than that, he's given a contract by NBC that I'll eventually see him make regular
appearances on the Today Show.
New champ, she gets $10,000 up front and hopes that she can keep the momentum going.
Damn!
If you're in right, things are going great.
Show's not just stable, it's thriving.
You just minted a bonafide cultural celebrity.
Now you're going to try again with a woman.
That was progressive for the time I assume.
I mean, hell, maybe she could be another Dr. Joyce brothers.
Even better, looks like Van Doren came out ahead.
Dude's getting marriage proposals a dozen a week.
Looks like he's about to start a new TV career.
This whole system is totally victimless.
I mean, except for Stemple.
Howdy keeps calling.
I mean, I mean, I know I keep not answering, but Jesus, what does he want?
Everybody knows him.
He got $40,000.
He's boring for TV. What, who said that? answering, but Jesus, what does he want? Everybody knows him, he got $40,000
boring for TV, but I, what, who said that?
I mean, if he was good, he'd still be on the show, right?
So here's the problem for an right.
No con is perfect.
He got way ahead by risking the reputations
of a veteran, a professor, and a lawyer so far,
but the first to knowingly take the deal is feeling deep regrets.
Stemple calls again and again.
And then one day he shows straight up at Anerite's office.
Tells Anerite, he's broke.
Even worse, he lent $8,000 to a dude that lives in his building for a horse race fixing
syndicate, and now the scary thug wants his money.
So yeah, about that TV opportunity you were talking about.
Oh no, there's still nothing for you.
It's about now that Stemple begins to drop the bomb.
And right can make right on his promise or Stemple is going to go public. Says he's going
to go to the justice department. Stemple promises to snitch on everything. All right. Yeah, Stempey
baby, that can't happen. And right explains to Stemple to calm down. First, you're a Stempi baby. That can't happen. N-Rite explains to Stempi to calm down.
First, you never got the answers in advance.
Second, look, it's all gonna work out.
Third, I think you need therapy.
In fact, I'll be happy to pay for it.
Here we go.
One Dan N-Rite pays for therapy, blank check.
There you go.
Also, would you mind signing this piece of paper
that says you never took the answers?
Stempi, science. Signs signing this piece of paper that says you never took the answers. Stemple.
Signs.
And that buys N-Rite a couple weeks.
But in the meantime, N-Rite can't make good on his promises of TV work.
So eventually, Stemple cracks.
Calls a reporter about the whole situation.
The reporter calls N-Rite.
N-Rite calls Stemple.
You win, you want your beans so bad, looking you on a new quiz show? Are you happy?
No, he's not. He refuses. Because now this isn't about fame, it's about pride. Stemple is going
to tell the truth and there's nothing in right can do about it.
And it's a noble gesture, but Stemple won't be a good messenger for long.
Not only did he sign a letter saying he never took the answers, but in right secretly
recorded.
Stemple blackmailing him.
So fine, Stempy.
Go to the press.
Go to the feds.
Me?
I'm untouchable.
Untouchable like a big wig in a Hollywood movie.
And funny enough, it's going to be a Hollywood screenwriter
who changes everything.
This is Tim Haft at host of Corsion Details. Now we return to Brian Brushwood and World's Greatest Con.
Unlike most of our players, James Snodgrass knows this is bullshit.
This is not how the biz should be operating.
He knows that he is part of a conspiracy, and he aims to come out smelling clean.
He pulls a trick.
Something that's known to copywriters around the world, that if you want to prove that
you wrote the words before somebody else claims they did, send it to yourself, certified
mail.
And if you are ever challenged on when you knew these things, you could present those sealed
envelopes, open them in front of an audience, and prove that you were the true originator
of the idea.
For the three weeks, the Snot Grass has the spotlight of 21 shown on him.
He wants insurance.
So he mails himself, the answers that Dan and Wright had provided him in certified mail
and holds onto them, knowing that eventually they're going to set him free.
I don't know if Snotgrass is just inherently cocky, or maybe having those envelopes tucked in his back pocket, helped gird his enthusiasm.
But here's the difference.
When Stimple thought about going rogue, considered ever so briefly the possibility that maybe he would just run wild.
Snodgrass. Yet.
In Snodgrass's case, he's told, yeah, he'll take a dive, just like Stemple.
And yeah, it's going to be embarrassing, just like Stemple. But he's told
that he's going to misremember a line from one of his favorite poets, Emily Dickinson.
Think about that moment. The exact same moment from two different perspectives.
To Stimple's eyes, he gets told,
you're gonna take a dive and it's gonna be about this question
and this is the wrong answer you're gonna give.
this question and this is the wrong answer you're going to give.
Snodgrass has the letters and no illusions about what this is.
And snodgrass interprets things very differently because he too is told when he's going to take a dive
and what answer he's going to give.
However, snodgrass realizes that he now knows the definite right answer
that he must not give. In the moments after his unexpected right answer, the producers run
onto the set and they ask if Snotgrass says, Hey, man, are you feeling okay enough to compete?
He says, yep, and they continue. But Sondras is in deep water now.
He has no idea what the next questions are going to be, and he has to answer them,
Bear and Square. And this leads to a truly amazing moment.
Here's host Jack Barry, setting everything up in the rematch one week later.
As you may recall, you each chose an 11-point question which asked for the
five groups of bones in our spine.
Now Jim, your first answer was sacram.
All I have here in front of me are these question cards, and there are answers on them which
are approved in advance of the program.
Well sacram was not on the answer card, so I had to rule you wrong.
Then Hank, you proceeded to name the five groups,
and you named as one of them Cuxic.
For my answer, Card did call for Cuxic or Cuxidule.
So I had to rule you right, and you won an awful lot of money.
Well, immediately after the program,
there were thousands of phone calls, hundreds from doctors,
and we found out that there was an inconsistency in the answers.
We went through a great deal trying to find out how we should square this out with both of
you in an effort to be fair in our decision and here's what we decided to do.
We decided that you're both going to play the game over again at $3,500 a point, right
back where we were.
But Hank, NBC and our sponsors...
Despite being furious as Snodgrass in the moment and right, he eventually comes around.
I mean, this is a big draw.
Lots of numbers.
It's not grass loses the rematch.
In the short term, this whole going rogue stunt, yes, that turned out to be a win for
the producer.
The letters, though, that's our hidden snake in the grass.
It was waiting for the perfect time to strike.
Meanwhile, at this exact moment,
Stemple finally makes good on his threat
and takes his story with a Southern District of New York's
Justice Department.
So far, this has been a story of people offering fame and people taking the devil's bargain.
For the rest of the story, you've got to understand the power of shame.
From an evolutionary perspective, shaming, exile in a small band of of 100 villagers, that equals death.
You know that image of the hands and the face being locked in while everybody throws fruit
at them?
The punishment is not the fruit.
The punishment is the fact that the stocks are built to force the person inside to look
at all the disapproval from their fellow villagers.
Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote about it in the Scarlet Letter.
There are stories of people who committed crimes and their one request is,
please pull out my fingernails right now while nobody's looking before the mob gets stirred. We are built in our core beings, our weird lizard brains, to associate
shaming with death. All right, do me a favor. Think of the moment of your own personal biggest
shame. A moment where you did something so embarrassing that you can't let go of it. When you
did something that you knew that was going to stick with you for the rest of your
life, the funny part is I didn't even have to ask you to do that because the moment I
mentioned personal shame, you already went to work.
You were already thinking of your personal lowest moment.
Now imagine that the whole world knows about it. Everybody you know and
love and everybody they know and love. Every single person on the planet knows it.
I'm not doing this to be cruel. I'm about to reveal my deepest shame. Keep in mind,
I'm a guy who will stick a nail in his eye just to get you to clap. I built a career as a touring magician because I sought out every media opportunity I could
get my hands on.
If you had a TV show, local, national, a radio show, a morning program, an internet program,
I wanted to be a part of it.
And as a result, I did a lot of stuff, 99% of which I'm very proud of.
Every appearance was just another clip,
another scratch-off lottery ticket that might be the one that made me famous.
Normally, I always do super polished material,
but there was one time I had a goofy, one-off,
lark, an idea that I thought would be perfect just as a standalone bit on TV.
The viral video actually, and if you're like the rest of the world, you probably thought it was totally real.
You'll hear about Call of Stig Mata, what it is that uses a knife, four-star-phone cups, and a term table.
The knife goes in a term table where it could spin around. And then I cover up the knife. It's a grainy video where a magician, me, is about to slam his hand down onto a styrofoam
cup with a knife hitting underneath.
And then I get the blanket selection and it all goes well.
And for a split second, it really looks like the knife just goes right through my hand.
The camera cuts, the next thing you see is my hand all bandaged me with a sheepish
grin saying,
I said it as a joke to my friends over at the tonight show and to my delight they had
me out to do it live on the show.
And if all goes well, it has their set he was impressed, it's a flash forward a few years and America's got
talent is looking for magicians because I have this very, very simple one note joke that
I think is hilarious.
Hell, if it's good enough for the tonight show, surely it's good enough for America's
got talent.
I send them the tape, they dig it, drive up to Dallas
with running wife and two kids. We get up there, spend an entire day in production.
But when that moment comes, and I walk out there, my seven-year-old daughter tears off
a piece of her blankie and says, for luck, daddy.
I took it into my pocket.
I mean, how easy is this gonna be?
The same trick that became a viral sensation.
The same trick I did on the tonight show that Ed Azner called me you fool with a smile.
I'm just gonna do a one more time.
It didn't go well.
Two of the four judges instantly thought I had actually injured myself live on stage.
After buzzing, after cackling, I came back and realized that not only had the judges decided they didn't like being
made the sucker, they were turning the audience against me.
And even in that moment on stage, being booed by 2,000 people, I knew one thing I wanted
to bury this segment.
And then the three and a half hour drive home.
And then the sitting there for three months being convinced that I had career cancer that
was about to drop like a nuclear bomb that I was going to be the sucker.
If I had the chance to personally break into that place and destroy the tapes, I would
have done it.
And that's the beginning of what I would have done for fear of the shame that was coming.
And then finally, the faithful night arrived.
America's got Talent in Dallas,
standing alone in my living room, I'm watching the show begin, and in the first four seconds,
I am the first pop that they put in the coming up on this episode. My heart is pulsing and racing. I feel that tight band of ultimate anxiety.
And I just think this is it, it's all over.
And I watch through the first segment,
the second segment, the third segment,
and finally we get to the fourth segment.
This is the one where they round up all the joke acts,
all the idiots who do everything wrong.
And I'm not in it.
I spent three and a half months agonizing
about what I thought was going to be the end of my career
for a moment that never showed up.
And I dodged a bullet of shame.
But for the people we're talking about, in this story,
they live with that shame. For decades, it ultimately becomes the single line of their obituaries.
It's 1957, and things are getting a bit hot in the game show world.
His whispers about talent grooming, meddling from title sponsors, out and out fraud starting
to bubble up all through the press, most of the stories they never make it to print.
The in-house attorneys at all of the press outlets, they're super scared of a libel suit
from one of the networks.
And that's enough to kill the investigative reporting that initially goes into it.
But in 1957, two national magazines both run articles compiling some of the allegations.
Combine that with a prosecutor from the Justice Department who's calling for a grand jury investigation
into industry-wide practices and specifically 21 NBC calls in and write, hey, man, what's
going on? And right says, oh, well, you know, he's never given any answers and approve that Stemple's
crank even plays for him.
The blackmail tape that he secretly recorded shows them the sign note.
That's good enough for the network.
They ride with in right and that means there are some pretty powerful forces defending
21.
In his book about the whole investigation, the prosecutor who
impaneled the grand jury describes the pressure he was under.
That pressure shows up in how many former members of the Justice
Department who are now in private practices
represent the interests of the network or enright.
Think about that. These are people who used to be the deciders of truth and fiction,
and now they're working for one side or the other.
He got overt hints that there might be a, you know,
a future in politics from if you just let this one go.
But the more N-Rite and the network stonewalled,
the more this prosecutor pushes.
And the whole time N-Rite is thinking, dude, what's the crime here?
The sponsor isn't complaining about theft or fraud.
Network is getting what they paid for.
The contestants, the contestants, well, I mean, yes, technically they're misrepresenting
themselves on national television, sure, but they're doing it because I'm telling them to. But you know what? From that first moment,
I walked into Stimple's dumb apartment, I was up front about what we were doing and what they
were getting themselves into. I mean, their actor is right. Their actor is in a story I'm writing.
They're actors in a story I'm writing. I'm pretty much Shakespeare.
And he's right.
They are actors to him.
But they are not actors by reputation.
They're friends, they're family, they're business associates.
They don't know them as actors.
The pride that comes from the show is a lie.
The act is a deception.
This show is a con.
But like so many people who have been conned, the shame of admitting it comes a prison,
a very cozy prison that people are willing to stay locked in forever.
And at this moment, the prosecutors begin to interview
former contestants, members of Enright's production staff,
almost to a man, they lie.
They say nobody gave any answers to anybody.
The prosecutors say, look man, you can lie to me now. But if you're
called back for a grand jury and you're put under oath, that's perjury. That's a real crime.
The grand jury is impendled. The same witnesses who are just interviewed are called, and again,
almost to a man. It all lie again, all to protect their own reputations.
That is the power of shame.
Meanwhile, Enrike goes full office.
He releases the Stimple tape publicly to combat press reports of what's coming out of the
grand jury. Enright is actively punishing the defector by ruining his reputation.
And yes, this is a rough road for Enright.
But at this moment, I mean, the most beloved champions are saying they're clean.
The only guy who says it's rigged is on tape blackmailing the boss for another bite of
TV fame.
The network wants to believe him. They're putting all the pressure
that they can to make this go away until the prosecutors get a hold of the snoggrass letters.
The smoking gun. Word starts to get around to all of the ex contestants. Guess what? The jig is up.
Inwrights assistant, the one who took over all the direct coaching
after Stemple, he's indicted on two counts of perjury.
Several of the contestants come back and tell the truth,
hoping they'll get a reduced punishment.
But mostly, they're worried about one thing.
When the grand jury minutes become public,
are their names gonna be in it?
Are they gonna be shunned? Will they be publicly
shamed? Prosecutors say your names are going to be left out of this. All they want is the people
that pulled this off. And yet, Enright never submits to testimony. He never lies under oath. After nine months, the grand jury concludes 59 sessions, 200 plus witnesses out of all
of them.
Only 50 told the truth.
Now comes the best news for Enright against all precedent in these matters.
The judge overseeing the grand jury seals the results.
In his eyes, there's no crime committed, therefore no need to drag the names of all these
fine people all through the press.
That's it.
That was Stimple's best shot.
You went through the press, you got nothing, you went through the law, your results got
buried in the front yard.
Come at me, bro.
I'm Dan Anwright.
At this point, there's only one organization left
that could do a damn thing about it.
The United States Congress.
And that's exactly what happens.
In 1959, television star and famous intellectual Charles Vandoren gets his doctorate, and yet
only months later, he's on the run avoiding phone calls from his lawyer.
He's avoiding phone calls from his bosses, and he's avoiding the highest legislative
body in the United States.
This is the cost of shame. Congress opened an investigation into the fixing
of television shows and with it, him the unsealed minutes of the grand jury investigation. Gone
were the promises from the investigators that the names of the contestants would be protected.
Once Stemple is called before Congress, he relishes in telling the truth. He narrates to the congressman, beat by beat every move he made.
There's a projection of a recording of one of his appearances.
He points out where Antwright told him to dot his brow for sweat, but never smear the
makeup.
Like a peak Las Vegas mentalist, Snodgrass opens on live television one of his famous sealed envelopes and reveals what's
inside.
And yet still, Vandoren remains elusive.
He puts out a new statement, sticking to his original statement.
He never received any answers.
Congress has to issue a subpoena in order to get him to appear.
But they can't locate him.
Banger investigators would eventually say that Vandorn was in part so terrified of coming
clean because he believed it would kill, literally kill his father.
I mean, it would certainly kill his career.
Hell, careers, plural.
Quite simply, he could not bring himself to face the repercussions
that this shame was going to bring to his door.
And yet eventually, he comes clean.
First to the investigators that he lied to, then to his attorney, then to his bosses,
and finally, to all of America.
He appears before Congress and tells the world that he's a fraud. and father, poet Mark Vandorn, are in the audience, as committee chairman Senator Orrin Harris opens the hearing. Charles Vandorn arrives to apologize and attempt to explain to the
millions whose friendship and respect he had won. He admits that he received dramatic coaching
and the questions and many of the answers. But his statement is a roofal and moving realization.
That for his wealth and fame, he paid a bitterly high price. It took the easy path and he took the money and he took everything that came with it.
He's immediately fired from NBC.
He's immediately fired from Columbia.
He's indicted for lying to a grand jury along with all the other big winners.
Van Doren never appeared as a regular on TV again.
He worked in West Coast academics for the Encyclopedia Britannica Company, but never again
as a beloved public figure.
The New York Times obituary for Charles Vandoren, written in 2019, features this headline, Charles Van Doren, a quiz show whiz who wasn't dies at 93.
That's it.
That's his whole reputation.
That's all you get.
You get to be the guy who was a fake or on TV.
Compare that to this obituary headline.
Dr. Joyce Brothers, on air psychologists who made TV house calls,
dies at 85.
Brothers also appeared at those hearings.
She denied getting any answers and her
producers vouched for her.
She got out clean and lived the dream.
Vandoren lived with his shame for the
rest of his life for that one fateful decision,
the one that would cap his career potential forever.
Never indicted for anything at all is Dan and Wright.
Yeah, he's humiliated. Well, one of his own thesis is proven right by this whole thing just after he's removed
from day to day production on 21.
Now the end rights not there with his cheat and team and money machine.
In the four weeks, they went without the Dan and Wright engine, 21 hemorrhaged $60,000
in prize money.
Way over the budget from Gerrital.
I mean, maybe you're thinking,
oh, at least Barian M. Wright Productions
has to write a big old check.
Filtre some of that money back out, right?
Wrong.
While Vandoren was on his epic winning streak,
NBC bought Barian M. Wright
to make sure that 21 couldn't switch networks over to CBS. That was a $2 million deal, 1950s money, and then
and Wright gets a golden parachute to make himself scarce from NBC when everything
goes bad.
The last four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, five, four, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, five, four, five, five, five, four, five, five, four, five, five, five, four, five, five, five, five, four, five, five, five, five, four, five, five, five, four, five, five, five, four, five, five, Canada. This is the only American TV company that dared to base themselves in the minor leagues of Canadian television.
During nights with the producers, this is at the bar after a shoot day and writes spin
stales of the story of 21.
In his version, he's the fall guy.
Everybody knew what was going on.
The network knew.
The sponsors knew everyone.
They could never wrap his mind around why Stemple got so mad.
It was so wrong about making money and being famous.
And yet, the answer was all around him.
Why was a talented producer like Enrite in Toronto and not Los Angeles or New York?
Why was a man who used to make shows
that would be watched by tens of millions of people
and give away hundreds of thousands of dollars,
making shows to be watched by a fraction of those people?
Reputation.
Believe and right or not,
the result of his shame is his exiled Canada.
Far away from the movers and shakers of real TV.
Sorry, Canada.
And yet, eventually.
Here's the game where knowledge is king and lady luck is queen.
It's the Chokers Wild.
And now here's the host of our show, Zach Barry.
And right gets another hit right here in America.
Even brought Jack Barry back with him.
And he eventually reestablishes Barry and Enright right in Los Angeles, the shame storm
passed.
I mean, yeah, talk to some friends at bars
and maybe they wrote some of it down after his passing,
but Enright never put his own words in a book.
He did come close to doing it in dramatic fashion too.
In the early 90s, Enright gets word that is script
about his scandal is getting traction in Hollywood. It's eventually
going to become 1994's quiz show and Enripe is definitely the villain. Seeing it coming,
I have to imagine that Dan Enripe saw his own career cancer bomb coming. And just like me,
he has that same thought of how do I blunt this edge? In my case, I did nothing,
but Enri puts out a press release
saying that he's making his own movie
and it's gonna be the real story.
Movie never gets made.
And Enri dies in 1992,
before he ever had to sit through watching Wyshaw.
Enri did his job.
He got the ratings.
But the path he took,
the permanent damage he inflicted
on the lives of every contestant,
the shaming he himself engaged in
to protect it.
All of this might well be...
The World's Greatest Khan.
This episode of World's Greatest Khan was written by Justin Robert Young and me, Brian
Brushwood, your humble host.
Production and research by Dog and Pony Show Audio in Austin, Texas.
Credit to prime time and misdemeanors by Joseph Stone and Tim Yone, as well as television
fraud.
The history and implication of the quiz shows scandals by Kent Anderson,
which along with contemporary news articles, retrospectives,
and archive video made for the bulk of our research.
Additional research by Rachel Oppenheimer.
Of course, you guys have questions,
and we want to answer all of them at the end of the season,
so get yours in by hitting us up at world's greatest con at gmail.com.
So we just heard a story about a TV game show. We found out that beneath that family-friendly
veneer, there's a very cut-throat world in which some very colorful, we'll say, characters,
are attracted. I'm here to tell you that the story of 21 isn't an outlier.
In fact, we're going to spend this whole season hanging around six different stories. We get to
see the man screwing over the little guy, the little guy sticking one to the man, truly awful people
competing honestly, the honest ones ruining their lives for the sake of greed.
We're going to see federal agents burst through a door and find a hardened criminal shivering on top of a bathroom stall, a room of professionals wondering if a clever hoodlum just bankrupted their
whole company. And we'll see a mysterious extraction so brazen that people still in the industry are left convinced they've
been made fools of in front of the entire nation by a single bitter ex-employee.
These are shows you've heard of, stories about, super password, who wants to be a millionaire,
the price is right.
Game shows are an irresistible lure for anybody whose ears perk up when the idea
of free money quick is brought up. Suckers and con men both. You probably know that the story you
just heard is dramatized in the 1994 movie Quisho. It was a bit of a sensation back then, got nominated for a best-picture Oscar, and during all of that buzz,
that led to one morning show appearance,
where they were looking for similar stories of similar game show dramas.
And while it isn't the famous quiz show scandal that's playing in theaters,
it is a story worthy of the big screen.
And I determined that there was a sort of pattern,
not easily.
It took six months for me to actually work out all the patterns,
but I wanted that shoot to move, so to speak.
I decided that I would go for a hundred thousand.
That's Michael Larson.
We just heard the story of a powerful producer
fleecing good people.
The next week, we're going to hear about the exact opposite, a devious mind who's thirst
for those angles that would give him quick cash, new no bounds.
Through ingenuity, deception, and good old-fashioned practice, he's going to rack up so much money
on a TV game show that some people in the control room worry that he's
about to bankrupt the network.
That's next time on World's greatest con.
Prime and Club hopes you have enjoyed this program.
It does roll up.