Dark History - 123: The Dark History of Hedy Lamarr: You can Thank this Hollywood Bombshell for Wifi
Episode Date: February 28, 2024Hi friends, happy Thursday! Did you know the person who paved the way for the invention of Wifii was one of the most controversial actresses in Hollywood? I know. Random! Today’s episode is about t...he one, the only, Hedy Lamarr. It turns out, we owe Hedy A LOT. Without her advancements in film and technology, the world would be a VERY different place… She came (onscreen), she saw (war), she conquered (Hollywood). And for that, thanks, Hedy! I appreciate you for coming by, and tune in next week for more Dark History. Want some cool Bailey Merch? Shop Dark History Merch: https://www.baileysarian.com _______ You can find the Dark History podcast on Apple, Spotify, wherever you listen to your podcasts, and every Thursday here on my YouTube for the visual side of things. Apple Podcast- https://www.apple.co/darkhistory Dark History Merch- https://www.baileysarian.com _______ FOLLOW ME AROUND  Tik Tok: https://bit.ly/3e3jL9v Instagram: http://bit.ly/2nbO4PR Facebook: http://bit.ly/2mdZtK6 Twitter: http://bit.ly/2yT4BLV Pinterest: http://bit.ly/2mVpXnY Youtube: http://bit.ly/1HGw3Og Snapchat: https://bit.ly/3cC0V9d Discord: https://discord.gg/BaileySarian RECOMMEND A STORY HERE: cases4bailey@gmail.com Business Related Emails: baileysarianteam@wmeagency.com Business Related Mail: Bailey Sarian 4400 W. Riverside Dr., Ste 110-300 Burbank, CA 91505 Dark History is an Audioboom Original. _______ Head to https://www.FACTORMEALS.com/darkhistory50 and use code darkhistory50 to get 50% off. Get your first visit for only five dollars at https://www.Apostrophe.com/DARKHISTORY when you use our code: DARKHISTORY. That’s a savings of fifteen dollars!Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay guys, so I was in a rabbit hole the other day as I normally am. I opened up my laptop at like
10 p.m. Next thing you know, I'm googling, right? Googling to see if Napster is still a thing I
wanted to know. Turns out they have 5.7 million users. I know. How? Huh? Now before I can get some answers, the website, it just stopped loading.
So I was like, the wifi went out.
My wifi went out, which is fine,
but like a major inconvenience.
I wanted to know what's going on with Napster.
I was like, is it my house?
Do I need to reset the router?
Do I like blow on the router?
Like a Super Nintendo game?
Put it back in. Huh?
The thing is, Wi-Fi crashes more than it should, but at the same time, Wi-Fi is freaking magical.
How does it work, huh?
My computer has zero wires and it's somehow...
All in the air.
Like the world's information is just there. do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do- an age of Hollywood. Ah, my favorite time. Turns out the person who paved the way for Wi-Fi
was one of the most controversial actresses
in Hollywood history.
What?
Actress?
Not a scientist?
I know.
Turns out she was both.
Today's episode is about the one,
the only, the legendary, Hedy Lamar. Hi, how's it going?
I hope you're having a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to my podcast, Dark History.
How's it going?
Here, we believe that history doesn't have to be boring.
I mean, it might be tragic.
It's sad a lot of the time.
Sometimes it's happy, but either way, it's our dark history.
So all you have to do is sit back, relax, and let me tell you that hot, juicy history
gots, okay?
Hedy Lamar, have you heard of her?
I know you have. Paul's dressed like her,
but I feel like he's doing a major disservice, no offense.
But she was gorgeous.
And Paul?
I don't know, girl.
Hedy Lamar, like so many other stars in Hollywood,
was not actually born with the name that we know her by.
Ah-ha!
Natalie Portman, whose real name is Natalie
Herschlag. Yeah it's Herschlag. Should I? Should I change my name? I need a LA name.
Let me know in the comment section down below what kind of name I should have.
Hedy was born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler on November 9th, 1914, into a Jewish family.
Hedy was born in Vienna, so she grew up speaking German.
She was an only child and she was very close with her daddy.
He would take Hedy on these long walks through town
and during these walks, her dad would stop
and explain to Hedy how different machines worked.
Like they would stop and look at stop lights
and street cars.
So they were in the street, he's like,
look, look at the lights, Hedy.
Yellow, red, green, or whatever, you know?
I don't know.
But they're learning together, and I love that.
And then when she got home,
Hedy would start looking at everything around her like,
hey, I wonder how this is made.
And she would take things apart and like tinker. She was curious. I love it. Again, this is the early 1900s. There wasn't a lot to do.
So she had a lot of time on her hands. So she could take and tinker and do. By the time she was five years old,
one of Heddy's favorite things to do was take apart an old music box and then put it back together at five
all by herself just to see how it worked. So, Hedy, we can safely say, was really on another level
than most of the kids her age. Me personally, I don't know what I was doing out of five,
probably shit in my pants and eating Play-Doh, but good for her. She's different, right? Because of those experiences
with her dad, Heady not only wanted to understand the world around her, but she wanted to use
that knowledge to build stuff that could help people, right? The problem was this was the
1920s, and there just wasn't a pathway for brainy girls who wanted to be engineers. It wasn't an option. Your job was to be pretty
and to shut up. Lucky for Hedy, she was beautiful, so she had that going for her.
Because society wasn't interested in her brilliant mind, Hedy used her good looks to get ahead in
life. When she was just 12, she won a beauty contest in Vienna,
and then she was actually scouted by a director named Max Reinhardt when she was 16. Now, this
acting opportunity was very exciting for Hedy. She had grown up going to the theater and watching
the ballet with her mom, so the idea of becoming an actress or like a performer, it just felt, I mean,
she was like, yeah, I'm sure too. This is my own personal opinion. But as a woman of the time,
literally, like you were either a housewife or you were famous. Like those were your options. So
it's like, I want to be a famous actress, right? And of course, like there were all those people
around her telling her how beautiful she was. So she was like, you know what?
Yeah, I'm gonna do that, bitch.
I'm gonna f***ing do it.
And she did.
So, Hedy, she moves to Berlin when she's 17 and she is there to keep pursuing acting.
And she even takes acting classes while she's there.
So she's like getting serious, you know?
She's doing the work.
It didn't really put her name, on the map though, you know?
That wouldn't happen until two years later
when Hedy had her breakout moment.
It was major and this moment had everyone
around the world talking.
Oh, oh my God.
I made it.
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Now let's get back to today's story.
In 1932, Hedy appeared in a film
that really catapulted her into the spotlight.
But...
Mwah, mwah.
It would also haunt her for the rest
of her personal career.
It was a double edged sword for sure.
The film was called Ecstasy.
Hedy was 18 at the time,
and she got the lead in the film, okay?
So this character she's playing was a woman
who was married to like a much older man
who just didn't really give a shit about her anymore.
And the film made waves,
not because of that boring character plot, whatever.
It was because Hedy performed,
she performed an orgasm on screen.
I know.
I'm sure men thought it was the first time a woman ever faked it.
Anyway, the shot itself is like so up close and personal.
It's like you're having an orgasm with her.
It's intense. It's hot.
Okay? And the world wasn't ready for it.
But here's the thing. Hedy claimed that she didn't know how close up the scene was going
to be. So Hedy went into this thinking she was making art, which she was. But she also
felt like the director had manipulated her. You know? Either way, this performance of
hers was very scandalous. Okay?
Some people loved it because they saw for what it was.
It was a performance.
It's a movie.
It's an orgasm.
Wow.
A woman having an orgasm, powerful.
And a lot of people hated it.
They thought it was just like straight up porn.
Now Ecstasy, this movie was actually banned in America
and Germany because it was considered
overly sexual and it also they considered it a bad representation of woman.
I know, because women shouldn't be having orgasms, don't you know that?
God bless America.
And all this bad press was pretty embarrassing for Hedy, you know?
She was also disappointed and confused.
Like, how did all this happen?
I thought we were making art, but on the upside, Ecstasy went on to win a big award at the
Venice Film Festival.
This meant that even though the movie was seen by many haters to be like smut and borderline
porn, it was globally recognized as an award-winning film
It was great this month that Heddy
Literally had just gotten her big break, but I'm sure like for her. It's a very
Your torn your torn because a lot of people are mad at you
But you're getting recognition but a lot of people are mad at you
But you're getting recognition like it's confusing right people are mad at you, but you're getting recognition. Like it's confusing, right?
So Hedy starts doing more and more theater.
She's getting lead roles,
and she's really becoming a bit of a celebrity.
There's one night she's just getting off the stage
for a play called Sissy,
which was getting major attention from theater critics,
and she was handed like this huge bouquet of roses. Now this was pretty standard for Hedy. She would get roses from admir critics, and she was handed like this huge bouquet of roses.
Now this was pretty standard for Hedy. She would get roses from admirers like almost
every single night. Guys would show up and try to get backstage to give Hedy their flowers in
person, and Hedy wouldn't send most of them away because she's a classy woman.
But also there was one stubborn guy who just kept showing up to the point where
she finally gives in and agrees to meet with him. This guy's name was Fritz Mandel and
he was the third richest man in Austria. Nice. I'd be like, yes, let him in. Let him in right
now. Third richest. I'll take him, Whatever. He was also a weapons manufacturer who was literally selling guns and ammo to Hitler.
So that was the downside. There's always a catch with these rich ones, huh? Fuck.
Well, obviously, Hetty's parents, once they found out, they were like,
they did not approve of this relationship. But Hetty was in love and stubborn and independent.
You couldn't tell her anything. She always had been.
So she was gonna do whatever the hell she wanted to do.
And also this was before World War II started.
So people didn't really realize just yet
how horrible Hitler was.
But his vibe, not great.
And Hedy's parents, they could sense it,
along with a lot of other Jewish people in Austria
and Germany at the time.
So unfortunately, in August of 1933, 18 year old Hedy marries 33 year old Fritz Mandel and
it was not a good call. Apparently Fritz was an extremely controlling man. He didn't want
anyone else to see Hedy so he talked her out of pursuing acting and basically like kept her as a prisoner
in his big fat castle. And what he hated more than anything was that scandalous movie she
had done, the words that he would never speak, ecstasy. Now Frick went full on psycho, he
tried to track down every single copy of the film in circulation just so he
could destroy them. He didn't want people watching his wife having an orgasm. He didn't
even know what that looked like. So, Hetty essentially becomes just a simple trophy wife.
But there was one perk. Fritz would bring Hedy along to his business meetings and conferences
with like the world's leading scientists. Fritz would be there talking about developing
military technology and really brainstorming with all these people who were really smart,
right? And she's learning. What he didn't realize was that his wife was secretly an
engineering genius. So Hedy is like sitting in
these same rooms with these scientists and she's hearing their ideas and she's essentially getting
an amazing engineering education just by tagging along and keeping a few notes, you know? So, a
few years go by she can't play this game anymore, She can handle it. Okay, this man is toxic.
He's not letting me live my dreams or anything.
In her autobiography, Heddy wrote, quote,
I knew very soon that I could never be an actress
while I was his wife.
He was the absolute monarch in his marriage.
I was like a doll.
I was like a thing, some object of art
which had to be guarded and imprisoned,
having no mind, no life of its own."
End quote.
You know, she's not having it.
But Fritz, obviously, he wasn't just gonna let her walk out.
She was his most prized possession,
but it was getting more and more dangerous
to be Jewish in Austria by this point.
So she couldn't just leave,
she really needed an escape plan.
So here's the escape plan that Hedy comes up with.
Step one, drug the maid.
We love that.
So she crushed up some sleeping pills.
I mean, I don't love drugging the maids, I'm sorry,
but I just like that someone did this, this is funny.
It's not, but like you get it. Okay, so she crushed up some sleeping pills
and then she slipped them into her maid's drink. Then she waited for the maid to
pass out. Step three, that was step two. Step three, while the maid was out cold. Undress her, take some clothing, swap it,
and then she puts on the maid's clothes as a disguise.
Brilliant!
Step four, she steals the maid's bicycle
and she fucking pedals her way out of there, bitch.
Ta-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
I love it, I love it.
I love it.
Heddy pedals her way through town,
like her life depended on it, which it did, really.
She had all of her jewels and her valuables zoned
into the lining of her coat.
Just in case she gets stopped,
she doesn't look like a maid who's just
stole a bunch of jewelry. She's smart, she had a plan. Good for her. Honestly, it's giving me Scooby-Doo and I'm
all here. It's very Scooby-Doo with her. So she heads to London. I'm not sure if she's still on
this bike. I'm going to assume no, but like she goes to London and this turns out to be an amazing
look because guess who was in London at the exact same time doing a little talent scouting?
Bitch, it's Louis B. Mayer.
Oh, you don't know him?
Let me tell you.
The head of MGM Studios.
You know, the lion?
You know that lion?
MGM.
Huge.
He was there looking for gorges.
So Louis knew that anti-Semitism
was becoming a real problem in Europe.
And this meant that plenty of Jewish actresses
were looking to get the hell out of there, right?
And hopefully find some work in America.
Louis' slick business brain realized
that he could scoop up these hot talented actresses for a
sweet price because these actresses had to leave Europe ASAP and he knew they would like
accept jobs with him even if the pay was crap because it's MGM.
Need I say more?
I would be $10 a week?
Okay, I'll go.
So right away, Hedy has a meeting with Louis because he's heard all about this incredible Austrian actress
who everyone was talking about and he's probably seen ecstasy. Maybe, I don't know.
Louis offers Hedy a standard contract. Now this contract would pay her about $125 a week and she would be an
exclusive actress for the MGM studio. $125 a week for MGM. Got it? Well,
Hedi was like, um, that's cute. Okay, she's like, I know my worth. She turns to
Louie and she's like, I'm okay. I'm good. No, thank you She knows that she can do better and again, she has a plan now
Hedy she's like if I say no to this guy like for reals
That's really stupid and she knows that like Louis going back to America
So she books a ticket on the same boat that he's taking
And she's like, yeah, I'm gonna pack all of my nice things, right?
I'm gonna pack all of my nice things
so I look like I've got it together.
And she decides that she's gonna fake it
until she makes it.
So she gets on the boat to America
and heady she has one goal, impress Louie.
So she puts on like a hot little bathing suit. She's strutting
around. She's like, oh what's your name again? Louie? I'm not familiar. Oh we met
weird. And then on one of like the first nights, you know, she goes to like the
dining room just dressed incredibly. She is wearing the most elegant dress she
owns and she walks right past Louis's table.
She's like, what?
Oh my God, who are you?
I don't know you.
And wouldn't you know it?
Louis stops her and he asks her to join them
and she's acting like she didn't know it was gonna happen.
What?
Oh my God, yeah, I'll sit, not a big deal.
It's just not a big deal.
So they end up talking, they become friends,
and Hedy manages to convince Louie that,
you know what, she's a freaking star.
He's like, you are a star.
She's like, I know you offered me $125 a week
and that's really nice and I'm so thankful, praise God.
But I believe I deserve $500 a week, Louie.
I deserve $500 a week, Louie. And guess what? Louie agrees. Go off, Heddy. Yeah, $125 a week to $500 in 1937. Heddy. Queen. Ladies listen. Always advocate for yourself, right? Say a crazy number, why not?
It might work.
The only thing that Louis wasn't so sure about
was like Heddy's name.
At the time she was still known as Heddy Keisler,
the star of that orgasm movie that had been banned in America.
So to like give her a little rebrand,
Louis and his wife decided that Heddy would need a new name.
So this is when they do some brainstorming and they somehow they decide on Lamar which in French means
the ocean. Yeah I mean at the time they were on a boat think about it they
probably were looking around like Hedy Hedy, Lamar.
So Louis sends out a little memo to the press so that by the time Heady and Louis step off
the boat in New York, people already kind of know about Heady Lamar.
Yeah, the Austrian actress who is coming to be a Hollywood star.
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Now let's get back to today's story.
So Louis, he gets to marketing right away
and he is pushing that heady
is the world's most beautiful woman.
And when I say she was striking, girl,
she could stop traffic.
She had this sleek jet black hair, just jet black hair,
piercing green eyes, full lips, beautiful bone structure.
She was captivating, but her looks surprisingly
were not really getting her anywhere. Louis
really was having a hard time finding her work. It seemed like despite her changing her name,
people still kind of like, they saw her as the ecstasy girl. So, Hedy started to worry. I mean,
she was only in America for as long as she could work. And she wasn't a full citizen yet. So, if
she couldn't work, she could be deported
back to Europe where it looked like there was a war about to go down any minute. So this
meant that she was really at the studio's mercy. In 1938, Louis had loaned Heady to a
different producer or like a studio company, you know?
It sounds mean to say loaned,
but that's what would happen.
They would let, they would borrow each other's actresses
and whatnot.
It was a way for them to like make money.
Anyways, I guess Walter was putting together
a cast of a movie called Algiers.
So he calls in Hedy for an audition
and she nails it.
Now this is her first major role in her first major movie besides Ecstasy of course
and it makes Hedy an overnight Hollywood celebrity.
Like she is the it girl. She has arrived. Everybody's waiting for her. Glamour glitz gorgeous.
She has arrived, everybody's waiting for her, Glamour glitz, gorgeous.
Heddy and the movie created a quote, national sensation.
Wow, I know.
Everyone from royalty to actresses to regular people
wanted to look like Heddy.
Before her, actresses like Marlene Dietrich were popular.
She was blonde, she had a very sophisticated voice and was thought to be exotic.
But, Heady, she had these dark features, that signature accent, and she wasn't just sexy like
Marlene, she was a bombshell. Like, you can stop looking at her. You're trying to figure out why
she's so gorgeous. She had this like signature middle part, shoulder length hair.
It's like wavy.
And women were taking pictures of her to their stylist
or to the salon and they were like,
give me the Heady Lamar.
This was like the Jennifer Aniston haircut
before the Jennifer Aniston haircut.
Remember everybody wanted that haircut?
Yeah, but it was Heady.
Paul's hair is kind of like Heady Lamar's hair,
but it's the ugly version.
Sorry Paul, no shade, but like...
I've cut the budget for Paul's hair and makeup,
and maybe I should put the budget back, huh?
I'm sorry about that.
Okay, so she's big, she's famous, she's gorgeous.
People are loving her.
Wow, she was invited to all the famous, she's gorgeous, people are loving her, wow.
She was invited to like all the parties, she met artists, producers, she was even friends
with JFK.
I feel like that's kind of like a good way to measure how popular you were at the time.
Like, if you're friends with a Kennedy, you were really that fucking bitch, okay?
I feel like specifically John Kennedy always attached himself to beautiful actresses and then like would have affairs with them covered up blah blah blah you know?
But I think that's like good for the career. I'm not sure
Anyways pretty much right away
Hedy realized the Hollywood actress life
was the opposite
Of glamorous
You didn't just wait around smoking cigarettes
and reading amazing parts that were written for you.
The studio at this time would own your ass,
own your whole, everything about you.
They owned you for at least seven years.
You would work six to seven days a week,
no matter what they said, you had to do it.
Women would have to get to the studio super early
in the morning to get their hair and makeup done,
get fitted for costumes.
They were expected to work late into the night,
either on set or it was mandatory for them
to be schmoozing at these parties, right?
Acting like a piece of ass,
acting like they're interested
in these boring men's conversations. And it sounds kind of still glamorous, like I want to mind that,
but I'm sure it wasn't, okay? Anyways, even though Hedy was expected to keep up this
reputation on the inside, she was just a big ol' little curious cat who wanted to, I don't
know, tinker and invent some shit. It was said that she would leave set
and immediately go home and like collab
with different scientists on different inventions.
Directors would even set up many versions
of laboratories in her trailer.
This was her hobby and she loved to tinker.
It didn't matter what she was working on.
What mattered was that she was using her brain because this whole acting thing for her, it
wasn't fulfilling.
It's kind of like your man who goes out every night in the garage and he like tinkers on
the motorcycle.
No one knows what they're doing or whatever and they're tinkering but it keeps them happy,
you know?
And it keeps them, just, and that's what they did with the headie.
They're like, just let her tinker, let her tinker, don't take it from her. At one point while Hedy was like doing her tinkering thing,
she actually invented something amazing.
It was really cool.
I was reading this like what?
She called it the Coca-Cola tablet.
Huh?
Yes.
So she took liquid Coca-Cola.
She somehow shrunk it down into a cube.
And then all someone had to do was drop
it into the water and ta-da! It would fizz up. You had Coca-Cola. Huh? You're saying this beautiful
actress like thought of something? Yeah. It was no big deal to her either. She's like, whenever,
I did it. So she made this because she wanted people like to have access to Coke around the world because it would be easier to ship as well. I mean,
it's just a little freaking little whatever. But I guess the product ended up failing because it
tasted like like shit, honestly. According to a heady, it quote, tasted like Alka Seltzer,
end quote. But honestly, what were you doing? Exactly. Nobody else was inventing shit. She
was trying and she was smart. Well, of course, it's like not all fun and tinkering for Heady.
You know, making actresses work around the clock was the studio's biggest priority. And if they
signed you, they were going to make sure that you showed up around the fucking clock when they
expected like, you know what I'm saying? They didn't give a shit about your mental and physical health.
They didn't care.
The actresses were put on like a one size fits all
conveyor belt, just busting out
all these Hollywood actresses, whatever.
And they were expected to keep up,
but many of them couldn't.
Hi, cause we're humans.
So the studio would then ply them with pills to wake them up
and then they would give them more pills
to help them fall asleep.
I mean, I'm sure you're familiar with Judy Garland's story
and if you're not, then what are you doing with your life, huh?
But like, it's the same thing.
They were doing the Judy Garland, okay?
Giving her uppers, giving her downers.
And to be fair, like it worked,
Heddy landed another huge role, this time in a movie called Boomtown.
Even though it wasn't the exact type of role that she wanted, the movie was successful,
which meant that she at least, you know, had some job security.
But behind the scenes, Hedy was struggling big time.
During her success, Hedy had gotten married and divorced a second time.
So, you know, it was just like not a great time, right?
Stressful, unhappy, sad, whatever.
And it wasn't any better at work.
Even though she was a glamorous movie star,
she said that she really didn't like it.
She said, quote, any girl can be glamorous.
All you have to do is stand still and look stupid.
End quote.
I'll baby girl, I'll sit like this All you have to do is stand still and look stupid." End quote.
Baby girl, I'll sit like this for how much?
Sorry, Hedy.
I get what you're saying, but like, goals.
Anyways, but she didn't like this because she was smart.
She was a smart woman and she had way more to offer and she knew it.
So she's pissed off, okay?
And she's getting depressed and Hedy decided to use all that frustration and she had way more to offer and she knew it. So she's pissed off, okay? And she's getting depressed and Hedy decided to use all that frustration
and she's like, I need to do something good with it.
So she turned to the war.
During the 40s, America was feeling
the effects of World War II.
Troops were like being shipped off to the war
and there was just a general sense of anxiety in the air.
And plus wars, no one likes them,
right? No one likes a war. They're expensive as shit too. So in order to pay for it, the
government asked American citizens to generously dig into their pockets and help pay for the war
through war bonds. War bonds are essentially like a loan the American people individually give to the government.
But the thing is Uncle Sam needed people to help sell these war bonds.
So what do they do? They go to America's favorite movie star,
Hedy Lamar. Now Hedy sees this opportunity and is just like oh my god yuck and she immediately
sprang into action and she went on bond tours for the United States.
By day, she was dancing and singing her ass off for everyday Americans, convincing them
to give their money, or at least some of the money, to the government.
She would also perform for the troops at night.
She was really in her charity era and And honestly, she was feeling fulfilled.
It gave her some kind of like purpose outside of just being
a Hollywood sex symbol, you know?
But guess what?
Doing this, she ended up raising over $25 million,
which in today's money, beep beep boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop boop $480 million.
One person, she did that shit.
Woo!
Yes, Hedy Lamar.
So for all the war bonds that she sold,
she was recognized and won an award.
And like all on top of this,
Hedy was still in the process
of getting her American citizenship.
So it was like, girls aren't even a citizen and her American citizenship, so it was like girls
not even a citizen and look at her kill it for America, you know?
And she said that she felt so strongly she had to give back.
So at this point Hedy decided to focus all of her attention on helping the troops.
She felt totally guilty about her, you know, cushy life during the war.
Meanwhile there are people in Europe who are fighting and dying in the trenches.
Entire cities were being destroyed.
And she was over in Hollywood, just...
Do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do.
You know, just looking cute and being like,
yay, life.
So she wanted to help.
And she got to thinking, like,
how can I help the war in a real way?
And not like as an entertainer,
but maybe as an inventor.
Look at this bitch go, I know she can fly.
So one day, Hedy is changing stations on the radio
and she's just hopping around.
Meanwhile, it hits her.
Life ball moment.
She has an idea for an invention that's about to save the lives of millions of soldiers.
And inches came and slapped her right in the face.
So at this point, the Nazis were easily winning World War II because they had some kind of
like advanced technology. They had very sophisticated tech that allowed
them to either intercept or like jam any communications between U.S. Army bases and like
their soldiers and ships and all that jazz. So this meant that American generals weren't able to
warn soldiers of Nazi bombs that were coming their way.
And even if they did manage to avoid the radio signal being messed with,
the lines they weren't secure. It wasn't a safe way to communicate.
Like, the Nazis were probably fucking listening.
So secret messages would be leaked right and left,
and because of this, like, thousands of soldiers would die every day.
So everyone's feeling a little helpless,
like how else do you communicate
without the Nazis finding out, right?
They can't do mind control, they don't know that yet.
Okay.
Uh, war dogs?
Waw!
Let's not bring the dogs into this.
Did you watch the war animals episode?
You should, super cute.
Carrier pigeons?
I don't know, nothing was working, okay?
They just couldn't sneak their secret messages by the Nazis.
They always kind of knew what was up.
So, Hedy, she's a genius.
I don't know if you know this, but she is.
And she was like tinkering around with her radio.
And she thought to herself, hey, Hedy, girl,
what if they just like alternated the frequencies?
Yeah, that's already over my head.
But you know the radio in your car?
Do you know the radio in car? Do you remember you have a radio in your car?
Well, like the number of your favorite radio station, like um, one out two points seven,
kids seven. Like that's the frequency.
You're losing me, Bailey.
I know, stay in it, girl.
The Nazis knew the frequencies that the Americans
were using to communicate with each other.
So, Hedy, she grabbed a piece of paper
and she was like, dear diary, today is a good day.
I am still gorgeous and I'm gonna solve the war problems.
I'm just kidding, but she grabbed a piece of paper
and she mapped out what her plan was. Instead of the frequencies going in a straight line,
because I guess that's how it works, they go in a straight line, they were going to program them,
the frequency, to jump around the channel and scatter so the Nazis wouldn't be able to track it. She believed it would be the communication device that would be the key to winning the
war or at least majorly fucking help you guys shit.
Even though she knew she had this idea that was going to work, Hedy knew she needed to
partner with someone to like actually help her create the prototype.
So she turned to an old friend of hers named George Anteel.
Hedy went to George for a few reasons. Like one, he actually took her seriously as an inventor,
right? She is still a woman. No offense, but you get it.
Two, he was a brilliant composer and she knew that her frequency idea would be perfect for someone
who like with a musical inventor mind. And most importantly, George had a personal vendetta
against the Nazis and he desperately wanted Hitler dead. So she's like, that's my man,
that's my boo right there, let's go. This is why George really hated them. So his younger brother was assassinated after two enemy
soldiers shot down his plane. And he, the brother, was actually the first American to be killed in
World War II. I mean, it was a devastating blow to the whole family. And George wanted revenge.
When Hedy picked up the phone and called George in the middle of the night to tell
him about her invention, he was like, banana bread at work bro?
Hell yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He was all in.
Okay.
They came up with an idea that would communicate 88 different frequencies at a time instead of just one
George and Hedy drew up the plans. Okay, they came up to the other they're like this is gonna work
It's solid. They're gonna love it and then send it to the Navy now. You think the Navy would be like a holy shit. Well, yeah
No, right after reviewing the plans, the Navy was like, avocado. Thanks. They didn't believe in it.
They thought it was not going to work. So they shot it down without even trying it.
When Hedy followed up with them to get like their thoughts, they essentially told her,
hey, why don't you leave the science to the men and go back to shaking
them titties or something?
You know, she was a woman.
She's just a pretty face.
God, how exhausting.
But I mean, yeah, you know, geez, and even worse, like her idea, get this, this is the
worst part, because like this would have helped tremendously, but her idea ended up being seized by the government and it was
labeled as quote property of an enemy alien. Excuse me, enemy? I just raised how much money
for you? Because she was still going through the process of getting her citizenship. Plus,
who the fuck was she? Like, what does she know? You know, they didn't like it. They
saw it as like a threat. Like, she was trying to do something major.
They essentially kindly tell her to fuck off.
Plus, once word got out that it was Heddy's invention,
people fucking lost their tits.
They're like, there's no way.
There's no way she can be hot and an inventor.
Like, they're not, you know.
Immediately people started to think either George
created the invention himself
and was just using Heady to promote it.
Or they were like,
Heady probably stole it from her ex husband Fritz,
that Nazi weapons dealer.
She probably stole it and was holding onto the idea
for years and she's trying to pass it off as her own
It's annoying at the same time Hedy was still struggling to take her career to like the next level kind of was at like the same place I mean she had a bunch of blockbuster hits, but she still wasn't like a highly respected actress
It was more like they they would put her in sex-forward roles
Because after all these years, she still was being associated with the orgasm in ecstasy.
You know, like that's all people put her with.
And she's like, you guys, I've done so much more.
And they're like, no, shut up, orgasm girl.
So this wasn't a good time in Hennie's life.
Okay, things were rough.
There was one good thing though.
I guess by the mid 1940s,
the entire planet chilled out
because Hitler was dead in World War II
was finally over.
Spoiler re won, I don't know if you know that, but yeah.
Everyone was like relieved.
Things were calmer, right?
But unfortunately for Heddy, she still felt like she couldn't fully celebrate because
she was having a sad realization.
At this time, Hedy was having a major personal crisis because she's starting to realize that
no matter what role she takes at MGM, the heads of the studio will only see her as that
girl who had the orgasm.
And it was like she was branded with a scarlet letter, right?
But instead of an A, it was an O for, uh, and that branding came from the very top.
You know what, Hattie?
You should have went to the very top and you should have ****ed that man.
That's my advice.
Then you'd get all the roles.
Okay, Professor Jan Christopher Horak,
the former director of the UCLA Film and TV Archive,
said that, quote,
Louis B. Mayer divided the world into two kinds of women,
Madonna and her, end quote.
Not like the strike-a-pose Madonna, you know?
Not that Madonna.
Madonna as in a lady who is as pure, as freshly fallen snow.
Oh, you know.
And that is not what Louie thought of Heddy.
I mean, he placed her into that horror category,
and it became clear to her that she was
just freaking stuck there.
She's like, can I be a horror and a good actress?
Come on.
Being a hot chick on screen was like, yeah,
maybe it was paying the bills, but it's not, it wasn't challenging. Heddy. Come on. Being a hot chick on screen was like, yeah, maybe it was paying the bills,
but it wasn't challenging to Heddy.
And as long as she was tied to Louis B. Mayer and MGM,
she was a, let's just say it, quote unquote, whore.
But as they say, it's always darkest before the dawn.
In 1945, Heddy decided to take a huge risk.
She goes to the Louis B. Mayer and she's like, you know what?
I'm out.
And she packs her bags and she leaves MGM.
Hedy wasted no time and she partners up with a guy named
Cecil B. DeMille.
And this guy was like known as the King of Hollywood because he was an iconic
producer and director for Zoll.
Before Cecil, there really was no American film industry, but he was the one who built
it all.
Cecil was over here producing a movie that was categorized as a biblical epic.
Inspired by a story from the Bible, Cecil wanted to take a story about faith,
repackage it, and make it appeal to everyone.
The masses.
To do that, he used huge sets, elaborate costumes.
He had some big budgets behind him.
Great storytelling.
And then of course, yeah, there might be some sex,
whatever, but that's not like the most of it.
And the story from the Bible he was producing was called Samson and Lila.
Are you familiar?
Well, it's this tale about love to see it in betrayal.
There you go.
After seeing an old Hedy Lamar movie, Cecil decided that not only was she absolutely
freaking gorgeous, but her brains made her perfect for the role of a scheming, sultry, female lead,
So Hedy landed the role and when Samson and Delia went on to be released, it was a box office
smash. Oh my god, let me tell you, it was like kaboom. And it was the biggest middle finger to
the MGM guy, Louie, whatever. But it nabbed five Oscar nominations
and was the second highest grossing movie of the decade.
The only movie that had like done better at the time
was Gone with the Frickin' Wind.
Heddy was like, bitch.
Pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft, pfft,
you know?
What are you gonna do?
I'm Hededy Lamar.
She was back baby and the public loved her performance.
So, FU Louie, suck my ass.
So, Hedy, back on top.
She's riding high.
That's her riding.
And while she's back in the limelight,
she has a bit of an idea.
Hedy looks at how well Samson and Delilah did And while she's back in the limelight, she has a bit of an idea. Hm.
Hedy looks at how well Samson and Delilah did, and she thinks to herself, hey bitch,
I've been around movies long enough.
Instead of waiting to be cast in other people's films, hey, uh, idea, why don't I just make
my own movie, huh?
Hm, not a bad idea, huh?
You know, she's getting real cocky.
She's like, I'm gonna do it.
I'm gonna fucking do it.
And guess what?
She does it. I'm gonna fucking do it.
And guess what?
She does it.
Hedy decides she's going to make a movie called
The Loves of Three Queens.
And she has like this grand vision for this film.
Now, first of all, the theme,
I guess it had resonated with her to her core
because it was about how beauty got in the way
of finding true love for three major women in history. It's kind of like an epic historical fiction. Now because she produced it, Hedy
was like, you know what? I'm gonna play all three lead roles. I don't need anybody else.
I could do it best. And she did just that. She went Eddie Murphy and like Nutty Professor.
Good for her.
She's like, I don't need actresses.
Why?
When I get to do it myself and I love that bitch
because I have that same mentality.
Like, I'll just do it myself.
I'll be man, woman, dog, I'll play all roles.
So then she finishes the movie, it's done.
She's ready to distribute.
Now here's the problem.
And shit hits the fan.
She isn't able to find any company
to distribute the loves of three queens. Now I don't know why but people didn't
want to buy this thing they didn't want to touch it and I don't have like any
evidence of this but the theory out there is that Louis B. Mayer most likely
played dirty and who are they gonna listen to? MGM or this Hedy Lamar girl, you know?
That's just the rumor, allegedly. And I bet it's probably true. Uh-huh. Anyway, so with no distribution,
this meant that Hedy's movie wouldn't show in any theaters, which meant that no one would pay to see
it, which meant that no one would see it, which meant that
hey just lost a shit ton of money. I don't know exactly how much. He said that she did dip into
her life savings in making the movie. She's more unfortunate that nobody would distribute it for her.
And I'm wondering right now, I forgot to look this up. Can you still, can you find the movie?
Is it able to, or can we watch it now? I'd be curious to know how it came out.
Just looked it up, you could watch the loves
of three queens on YouTube.
I know what I'm doing tonight.
So Heddy's life starts to take a nosedive
that she just never was able to recover from.
In 1958, she essentially retired from Hollywood.
She was like, I'm done with it.
It was too much, so many ups and downs,
and the chaos is just exhausting.
And things, sadly, for her,
they really weren't any better at home.
So at the time, Hedy, she had a new husband,
a different husband.
She was married to a Texas oil millionaire
named Howard Lee.
I know, she got these rich ass daddies.
Fucking great, you know?
Howard was her fifth husband, good for her.
Yeah, I keep trying, I guess.
And like all those husbands that came before her,
things started out great, right?
Oh my God, I love him, he's amazing.
But then at one point, things just change.
They go downhill and they go downhill fast.
Turns out that her husband Howard was a bit of an alcoholic, uh, yeah, and was horrible
to Hedy and she, they had children at the time too, and he was horrible to the kids
and it was just awful.
But out in public Hedy was like just out and about playing the role of like
Texas trophy life, which I'm sure is so hard, you know? She even admits like at first it
was a lot of fun, but it got old quick. Heddy was just depressed at this point. She felt
like she had failed at everything. It got so bad that sources say Heddy believed this
may have been the darkest time in her life, not only because of the
divorce, but also because her 14-year-old son is named Tony. He was out riding a bicycle and he
got hit by a car. He ended up in the hospital and it was like a near-death experience, right?
At the exact same time, in the middle of the divorce from Howard while her son is like cleaning on for his dear life in the hospital.
She was expected to testify in court for her divorce.
She's like, bro, I'm busy, right?
She was stressed.
Okay.
She's like, I can't do it.
Like I'm not, I can't make it.
So remember her stealing the maids outfit and all that?
Well, she's like, I'm gonna do that shit again.
Instead of going to court herself, Hedy sends in her stunt double.
Yeah.
So in Hollywood, you get like a stunt double or whatever.
Well, she kept in contact with that stunt double.
And she's like, hey, what are you doing?
Are you available?
That's a brilliant idea.
If I had a stunt double that really looked like me
and I could pass, you would
never see me ever. It would be my stunt double all the time. I've actually heard of people
who send out their stunt doubles because they have like the same measurements and everything
and they make them go try on a bunch of clothes and they shop for you. And that I can get behind.
I hate shopping for clothes, right? She does that. Um, great idea.
But sadly it turns out like it actually what it backfires in her face.
The judge was like, wait a minute, who are you?
And finds out that this is a stunt double finds out everything and he tore Heady fucking
apart.
Okay.
But not only that, the judge cut Heady's's share of the divorce settlement leaving her with like almost nothing
Because all because she played this dirty game, but like it wasn't a dirty game or some was in the hospital
Well and because everything was just going wrong. She had a full on mental breakdown
Her son was able to make a full recovery from the accident, but Heddy was just never the same
So she gets a divorce,
I don't know how, but she gets married one more time after Howard, but this time it only lasted
like 19 months. So she had six marriages, no big deal, whatever. Yeah, they all failed, but at least
she tried. I think it's easy for us to kind of think like, well, the men probably sucked anyways,
like they probably like blah, blah, blah, but that wouldn't be the full story. That's because in the 1960s and the 1970s,
Heddy became more secluded from the public eye. At the same time, according to her son, Tony,
she became more unstable and unpredictable behind closed doors. I guess she had just reached her
breaking point. It was like the smallest thing would just push her over the edge and she would go
full on just fucking cycle. For example, her son had told a story that one day, uh, his mom dropped
a fork and I guess because he didn't immediately bend over and pick it up, Hedy, out of nowhere,
just like gets up fucking, whacks her son right across the face and screams,
whatever I dropped something, you pick it up.
Now the real mommy, dearest, I think we were mistaken, right?
Hedy was out of control and scaring everyone, like her children and whatnot.
And you know, it's like poor
things she just had a low time in her life but like there was actually another reason as to why
she was so out of control. Well there was an answer there was a reason and the why to it all
is pretty dark. You see Hedy had no idea she had no. She was in the middle of battling a horrible addiction.
Okay, listen. Listen. There was a man, a man named Max Jacobson, who was a doctor to the stars.
Now this guy was the Hollywood executives go to call, call on doctor that they would rely on for uppers and downers.
His nickname was Dr. Feelgood.
Oh yeah, wow, right?
And look, if you worked for a studio, MGM,
whatever the studios are, you know, he hit them all.
Like they were on call.
I'm talking from Elvis to Judy Garland to JFK
to Hedy Lamar to like if you were an actress
during this time, most likely they got touched
by Dr. Feel Good.
Now Dr. Feel Good would come in and he would tell them,
I'm here to give you a vitamin shot
and this vitamin shot is gonna boost your energy,
you're gonna feel good and you're gonna be able to perform.
And he would. And like that's great, right? They're energy, you're gonna feel good, and you're gonna be able to perform. And he would.
And like, that's great, right?
They're like, oh, thank you so much,
but they had no idea what this vitamin shot was.
Now, Hedy saw a doctor feel good multiple times
from the 50s to the 70s.
And like, during their visits,
doctor feel good would show up,
hi, how you doing, Hedy?
Oh yeah, load up a vial and inject Heddy
with like no questions asked.
She was under the impression that the doctor
was giving her vitamin B shots,
but those were not vitamin B shots.
Ugh, come to find out, Dr. Feelgood was loading Heddy up
with 40 milligrams of meth.
Heddy was in her full-blown meth era.
We're not mad at Hetty, right?
Like, she didn't know.
She just trusted this doctor for years
and they were doing, or Dr. Fieldgood was working
with all of these celebrities.
Why wouldn't she trust them, you know?
So for like about two full decades of her life,
Hetty Lamar was addicted to meth.
That sucks.
I mean, it explains the wild behavior.
The fork? I don't know.
In 1974, Dr. Feelgood,
he had his medical license taken away,
he got caught or something,
but Hedy remained addicted to pills long after that.
Well, the shitstorm just kept on going, baby girl, listen.
So an autobiography comes out about Heddy.
And at first it was like, oh, great, yay, autobiography.
But it, oops, it was called Ecstasy and Me.
And Heddy Green lit it.
She's like, yeah, I want the autobiography, whatever.
But then I guess the ghost writer filled in the blanks where she wasn't the ghost writer like filled in the blanks
where she wasn't looking for someone to fill in the blanks.
Like the ghost writer made up all of these
wild, juicy stories about her life
in order to sell more copies of the book.
And like that's great and whatnot,
but that's not what she was looking for.
But they didn't care.
They just went ahead and like hit that publish button. At one point,
Hedy was arrested in Los Angeles for stealing from a department store. I know, Winona, she tried
to steal a suit, some eye makeup, greeting cards, bikini bottoms. She had a ton of money
and like physically on her at that time she had like $14,000 but she
was stealing anyways. It obviously when she got arrested it made headline news and people were
shocked they could not understand why is this wealthy woman stealing again and like we're no no
writer it was just like confusing to everybody and it didn't stop heady though because it happened
again in 1991.
And people were like putting the pieces together that maybe something was like really wrong
with her.
She's being weird, you guys.
When Hedy was 78 years old, she was arrested again in Orlando, Florida for shoplifting.
This time she was stealing laxatives and eye drops.
Okay, girl.
If you're gonna steal, make it good.
Turns out despite all the accomplishments in her life,
Hedy actually really had no money to her name.
Tabloids described her situation as destitute.
But her son Tony really laid out how bad things were.
He said, quote, she spent her life alone
with no one to ground her or care for her.
She got screwed a lot with her invention, with her husband's, her career.
Her own lawyers cheated her. It was just bam, bam, bam. One thing after another."
End quote. Heddy started getting more and more plastic surgery, you know.
Sadly, a few of her procedures were botched. Plastic surgery has come a long way now, so
procedures were botched. Pleasant surgery has come a long way now, so it's rough back then. So like after a couple of procedures, she was unrecognizable and essentially like a shell of
her former self. If Hetty's story ended there, it'd be like, oh, the end, bummer, right? Well,
thankfully it doesn't. A Forbes article came out in the early 1990s, and God bless this article, because it brought fresh attention
to the frequency-hopping invention
that Heddy and George came up with.
And the timing was perfect,
because the internet was becoming a very big thing.
Well, here's the part that is just incredible, right?
It turns out Heddy's invention paved the way
for a secure internet to even happen.
Like, it was part of the foundation of the internet.
And people were realizing that like
when her invention first came out,
it was way ahead of its time.
Since 1945, her patent had been cited
at least 62 times by major tech and communications companies.
And it has been crucial to the development
of modern Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, smartphones,
and even military satellites.
So what I'm saying is it's safe to say
that several billion dollar industries
owe a huge debt of gratitude to Miss Hedy Lamar.
I mean, sure, we can all say like,
well, they would figure it out eventually,
but she already did, bitch, okay?
She already did.
Thank you, and no one listened to her.
And remember back when the US government
buried Hedy's work and said that like,
they had no use for it?
Maybe they didn't at the time,
but turns out, you know,
the government found a way to use it after all.
20 years after Hedy came up with it,
the US Navy used an updated version of it
during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.
But you know what they didn't do?
They didn't tell Hetty.
No, they didn't.
They didn't give her a little phone call like,
hey, girl, thanks for that, or write her a letter.
No one told her.
She had no idea that her technology helped save the world
from nuclear disaster.
Queen poor thing.
I just feel like if you would have told her,
it would have gave her some like, to be acknowledged
and to feel like, oh wow, it actually did do something,
you know, like they should have given her that.
Anyways, in 1997,
Hedy and George, they were given the Pioneer Award by the Electronic
Frontier Foundation and then the US Navy and a few companies, big companies I should say,
like Lockheed Martin, pulled their heads out of their asses and finally gave Hedy some
recognition, recognition that she freaking deserved. They publicly thanked Hedy for her invention, gave her an award, and most importantly, recognition. Isn't that all we want sometimes?
Just some freaking recognition. Right? And that's all Hedy wanted. Some acknowledgement
that she did something special. She did something, right? She helped make the world a better place.
It's nice to know that she received some recognition
while she was still alive,
because I feel like a lot of the times in these stories,
it's like well after they're dead, right?
And like that sucks.
You know, you get it.
On January 19th, 2000,
Hedy Lamar died in Florida from heart disease
and never made one cent from her invention.
She was cremated and her son ended up spreading her ashes back in her beloved home country of Austria.
In 2014, Hedy and George were inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame.
I know, right? That's so great.
Thank God this story ended on a positive, you know?
Well, yeah, we'll take it. We'll take it. We'll take it, shut up, we'll take it.
Ah, ah!
The world should be a little bit more familiar
with Hedy Lamar's name,
not just because of her gorgeousness or her acting,
but because of the brilliant mind she had
that literally changed the world.
And I was thinking about it,
and I mean, the takeaway from this story,
I was like, back then, you know, shit, just women weren't listened to.
We could still have this long debate about today, but you have to admit that we've come,
we've made progress, right?
But back then specifically, they women were just pieces of ass.
How exhausting.
There were pieces of art to stare at, not allowed to speak, and that all it was.
Okay, I mean, women, we weren't even allowed to have credit cards until 1974.
So it sucked.
Now there's still a lot of that going on today, but we've come a long way.
I mean, we're running, uh, workplaces, being bosses and shit.
Thank you.
But even though we've made progress, it's still like, I think my takeaway was like
to keep tinkering and to never ever let people tell you
that you can't do something, okay?
You're smart, you know you're smart.
You have to believe in yourself
and when you want something, you can get it.
You can get it on nose.
You might have to suck a couple of d***s
to get to the top, baby, but do it.
Because once you get there, you can say fuck all y'all
and invent something and like change the world.
Women power, right, Joan?
Now you fall, you're out.
So keep tinkering and keep being smart ladies
and gentlemen, but keep doing it
because we can take out of the world
and solve problems.
Okay, thank you.
I'm gonna get off my soapbox now.
So next time it's 2 AM, you little fat little raccoon laying
in bed and trying to use door dash to get
a freaking Happy Meal.
Shout out to Hedy Lamar because without her,
there would be no Wi-Fi to get them delicious chicken nuggets. You're welcome. Join me over
on my YouTube where you can actually watch these episodes on Thursday after the podcast airs
and see how cute we look right now me my friends and while you're there you can also catch my
murder mystery and makeup. I'd love to hear your guys' reactions to today's story so make sure to
use the hashtag dark history over on social media so I can like follow along and see what you're saying.
Now my favorite part, let's read a couple of comments you guys left me.
Ali commented, I'm glad Paul has gotten more involved with these shows. Glad
you're feeling better Bailey. Thank you Ali, I have been feeling so much better
and yet Paul's wants more airtime so I've been involving him whatever but I'm glad you like it huh Paul great I do all the work here okay
and they just get praises anyways Haley left us a comment saying my favorite
party trick is to whip out random facts of people that I've learned from your
videos love that for me haha this is the my I'm going to frame this comment
because Hayley, that's exactly why I do this. I am such an introvert, but since doing dark history,
I can go to parties and like I'll have the most random facts. Of course I'm going blank right now.
Okay, can't think of one. But yeah, I come out with these random facts
just swinging out the gate like,
hey, you guys know the history of dildos?
Well, let me tell you, huh?
And it's the best, right?
Please do that more.
That's what the show is for.
So you can have conversations.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ah, okay.
Did we catch an earthquake on camera?
We caught an earthquake on camera, everyone.
That was so cool.
That means we're gonna have a bigger one
and we're all gonna die.
Khaleesia left us an episode suggestion.
Hello from Texas, Bailey Bunch.
You should do a dark history about nurses
and how it started and evolved. You will
definitely be in for an eye-opener. Stay curious. Thank you, Khaleesia. It's funny
you say that. Recently I've been thinking and marinating on the idea of doing a
dark history about nurses. Love that. That's a great recommendation and stay
tuned. Okay? Thank you guys so much for leaving comments.
I appreciate it.
I look forward to reading what you guys are saying.
So keep them coming.
Maybe I will acknowledge your existence here.
That's our history.
Dark History is an audio boom of original.
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian,
Junya McNeely from Three Arts,
Kevin Grush and Matt Enlow from Maiden Network.
Writers, Joey Scavuzzo, Katie Burris, and Allison Filobos.
Production lead, Brian Jaggers.
Research provided by Xander Elmore.
I want to give a special thank you to our expert, Dr. Ruth Barton, and I'm your host,
if you don't know.
My name is Bailey Sarian. I hope you
have a really good rest of your week. I hope to see you next time. Please make
good choices out there and I'll be seeing you guys later. Goodbye! Music