Dark History - 44: Signs, Seances, and the Stars: Dark History of Psychics and Astrology
Episode Date: May 18, 2022What’s your sign, babe? How many times have you been asked that? How many times has someone blamed their behavior on the planetary alignment or the stars? It’s all astrology’s fault. But there i...s so much more to astrology than just the ~signs~. Today we go into the long history of astrology and how we got from charting the stars to seances in the white house. It’s the Dark History of Psychics and Astrology Episode Advertisers Include: OUAI Haircare, Upstart, Stitch Fix US, and Apostrophe. Learn more during the podcast about special offers!
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Hi friends, I hope you're having a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian, and I'd like to welcome you to the-
Oh dear, my robe fell down.
Oh my goodness!
And I'd like to welcome you to the Library of Jark History.
That was sexy for a minute, huh?
Hi, so if you don't know or you're new,
this is a safe space for all the curious cats out there
who think, hey, this history really is boring
as it seemed in high school, I mean,
or just school in general.
Oh, it happened again.
Oh, nay nay.
This is where we can learn together
about all the dark mysterious dramatic stories
our teachers never taught us in school or told us about or I don't know, put in history books or something.
Okay, so what's your sign?
Have you ever been asked that question?
Have you ever asked someone that yourself?
I know you have, okay, you guys are always trying to analyze everybody with your little signs.
More than 90% of the adult population, they know they're zodiac sign.
But if you ask them if they believe in astrology, they probably won't answer with the resounding
yes.
So, what's that all about?
Hmm?
I started thinking about this and wondered, how did astrology get its start?
What was its influence?
Who took it seriously? Did anyone use it to their advantage? Is it a legit science or just a bunch
of flim flam to use Houdini's word? And where do psychics fit into all of this if they even do
in the first place? In my mind, the two are linked together, you know? So I wanted to find out if
they were. Well, I did a little digging and I found out that in order to answer these questions, we
needed to start at the beginning.
And I mean the very beginning.
Okay, let's go.
It said that astrology got its start around 2000 BCE, which also was the year math was invented.
Prehistoric humans mapped stars, the seven visible planets,
and even used marking bones to mark the lunar phases.
By 1200 BCE, the people of Sumer,
which today we know as Iraq and Syria,
began to make note of the movement of the planets and stars.
The Sumerians can be credited with all kinds of advances
in agriculture, math, and astronomy
that we still use to this day.
Next came the Babylonians,
and they picked up where the Sumerians left off.
Over the course of thousands of years,
they came up with a very first version of astrology.
This system theorized that the position of the planets,
sun, and moon within the stars
at the time of the person's birth helped determine their personality and influenced the course of
their their whole life. To help analyze this info, they created a chart that they called a horoscope.
Now this chart is what astrologers used to help people understand their lives and like help
them make decisions.
And the oldest known horoscope chart dates all the way back to 410 BCE.
And the next time someone blames their crazy behavior on the fact that they're a Gemini,
we can think the Babylonians for that too.
Because they also created the Zodiac Wheel, the one that we know today.
Yeah, they created that around 700 BCE. What were they on to? Were they on drugs? What were they doing?
You know, the presence of astrology can be seen throughout ancient cultures. I'm talking
Chinese, the Mayans, and the Polynesians to name a few. It's also thought that Stonehenge in England was a stone circle used to follow the Sun and the Moon.
And astrology wasn't just some like verbalists pastime, it was used to create calendars as a form of navigation,
to predict seasons and the weather. The information gathered helped with everything from planting and harvesting crops to migration and travel.
In other words, astrology was sometimes
the very key to survival.
That's wild.
Mm-hmm.
While in 331 BCE, Alexander the Great conquered
the Babylonians and the Greeks took over
the development of astrology.
They're credited with naming the planets
and the 12 zodiac signs.
In fact, the word zodiac itself comes from Greek.
And no conversation about the Greek synestrology
would be complete without mentioning the oracle of delphi.
Now, this is a slight detour from our conversation
about astrology, but an important one,
because it's where we see the line
between astrologers
and psychics, certabular.
Oracles were seers or what we know as psychics.
Okay, they weren't necessarily astrologers,
but both oracles and astrologers predict things.
So they got that in common.
People came from everywhere to ask the Oracle for advice.
Everything from like, hey, when should I plant my crops?
Even down to like, hey, when should I declare war?
Because it's like, you know, they go hand in hand.
And some say the Oracle of Delphi was just like
the telephone psychics we have today,
or at least used to have.
Our telephone psychics stealth thing,
let me know down below.
People gave the
oracle a little goal to ask a question, and the more gold they gave, the more info they got.
So the oracle was a huge deal. But as Christianity spread and became more influential,
the oracle's popularity decreased. So let's fast forward to the 1500s. By this time, astrology has become
pretty mainstream. Universities have astrology chairs, royal courts, keep astrologers on
staff, and even Protestant leaders and the Pope are getting their charts read. Wow!
Astrology was so popular at this time that Paris had about 30,000 astrologers.
That's just in one city.
Perhaps the most famous astrologer and seer of the time was Michel du Noche-Sradam, better known as Noche-Domis.
Noche-Domis was born in France in December of 1503.
In addition to being an astrologer and a seer,
no shodamas, your name's gonna be a problem for me, isn't it?
Well, he was a doctor.
Back then, in order to get your medical degree,
you needed to study astronomy slash astrology.
I say astronomy slash astrology,
because we think of astronomy as the study of things beyond the Earth's atmosphere and astrology as
interpreting how the stars and the planets impact us.
But back then they were considered to be pretty much the same thing.
Noti, like almost all astrologers at the time, was a doctor and
since astrologists believe that planets
was a doctor and since astrologists believe that planets influence whether people were healthy or not So medicine like should too right anyways
No Stradamus or noti was a pretty well respected dude an astrology was a very important part of the of his medical practice
Noti also wrote a very successful hominac for the year 1550,
and that got him a lot of play
with the wealthy people about town.
So his patients went to him for his advice and insights
and not just medical issues.
I mean, there were people who questioned his abilities,
but for the most part,
he was seen as like an accomplished doctor and astrologer.
He was such a big deal
that even the queen of France consulted him
and had him do charge for her kids.
The queen was so impressed with him
that she gave Noody a fancy title.
I don't mean any disrespect.
I just really can't say no sir Domis,
you guys, okay?
Thank you.
Now it turns out all of his predictions were wrong,
but luckily for Noody, the Queen
shouldn't really know that, okay?
He was like, and no one's gonna tell her, all right?
Noody may be best known for his book, Le Profit des, which contains 942 poems that predict
the future using astrology.
The book is so popular that it's been in print almost consistently since its death in 1566.
A lot of people credit note with predicting everything from the death of Henry II to the French revolution,
to the rise of Hitler, and even the 9-11 attacks. But, a lot of academics and researchers say those claims are based on incorrect interpretations
or just flat out inaccuracies.
Now around the same time that Nodi was born, there was another astrologer making a name
for himself.
Girl, bless my soul.
His name is Nicholas Copernicus.
Sounds about right.
Copernicus played a major role in advancing modern science.
I'm laughing because these names, you guys, these names.
He's known as the father of modern astronomy.
Copernicus was born on February 19th, 1473,
and what we now know as Poland.
He was the fourth and final kid of a family. Nicholas, senior, and Barbara.
Barbara.
The most basic name ever.
Barbara.
Oh my god, that's funny.
That's comedy right there, you guys.
Her name's Barbara.
Everyone else has these fucking.
What names? Barbara. Everyone else has these fucking what names?
But Barbara over, okay, look, they were wealthy copper merchants, but dad died when Copernicus
was like very young and he was raised by his uncle on his mom's side. So Copernicus was trained
in law and medicine, but he was more interested in like math and the stars.
His claim to fame was reimagining the solar system with the sun in the center and his
work led to advances by Galileo and Johannes Kepler.
One might think that like all this reimagining of the sun and the earth and the moon plus
the refiguring of the movement of the planets might
change people's view of astrology, but it really didn't.
Astrologists just incorporated these changes into the world view and just kept it going.
Plus astrologers and astronomer's were still considered to be one and the same.
And Johannes Kepler, the person responsible for the three laws of planetary motion, would
have agreed.
Lord bless my soul, this is gonna be a long episode with these names.
Everyone needs a nickname.
Oh, we gotta take a nap break. Hold on.
Johannes Kepler was born on December 27th, 1571, and what we now call Germany.
His dad was a mercenary and his mother,
Katharina Kepler, was the daughter of an innkeeper,
and a supposed witch, as we all are, but more on that later.
So Johannes grew up, I guess, poor, but he was smart
and got himself a scholarship to study theology.
That's when he started learning about the theories of Copernicus.
He was so enthralled by Copernicus's idea that he gave up theology for math and astronomy.
Like I said earlier, Johannes went on to help popularize and evolve Copernicus' view
on the solar system as well as other astronomical advances. Johannes was also an avid astrologer. In fact, he was last major astronomer
slash astrologer. He wrote multiple books to support his view that what happened in the heavens
had a direct impact on what happened on earth. He was also a practicing astrologer and seer.
Over 1,000 horoscopes he wrote still exists today. As a seer, Johann's made numerous predictions, and if you're wondering, yes, many of them
were actually like Super Spoton.
He predicted an awful cold spell, a peasant uprising, and even the Turkish invasion.
This brought him lots of notoriety. But not everyone with the
abilities of psychics and astrologers were treated equally. Johan's own mother
was put in jail for doing more or less the same exact thing that earned him
praise. Because in case you forgot Johan's mother was considered to be a witch, boo.
Anything we do, man.
We're a witch, we're a slut, we're a whore.
We just can't win.
Well, let me tell you about Johann's mom.
Her name was Katharina.
Yeah, she was born in Germany in 1546.
She was raised by an aunt instead of her parents.
It's believed that this aunt may have been
where Katharina learned witchcraft
since the aunt herself was burned at the stake for also being a witch.
Catharina married Johann Stad and had four children.
By all accounts, it was a pretty unhappy union, and things were just not good for the Kepler
clan.
Catharina made a living as what was then called a wise woman.
In other words, she made herbal potions, spells, and charms.
One might say the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Except that Johans had the prestige of a renowned university behind him, and Katharina had,
I don't know, just a bad reputation.
You see, during this time thousands of people
were rounded up in accused of being witches.
The accused were typically poor, outsiders,
mentally ill, survivors of assault,
or in some other way, just an easy target.
And majority of them, women, of course,
especially single women, or widows.
Catherine was around 70 years old, and her husband had been out of the picture for quite some
time, and by all accounts she was just a rather feisty character.
So it was no surprise that, you know, she was swept up in this witch hunt craze that
was going on.
Katharina's case ended up going on for six years, which is unbelievable. Johann's worked tirelessly to defend his mother,
which took a huge toll on him and his career.
But he must have done a good job
because she was released from prison, the downside.
Yeah, she was kicked out of town.
Catherine died six months later,
and then she was pretty much forgotten.
Mm, bummer.
Johann's on the other hand, he died a few years after that in 1630, but even today, there's
still name and shit after him like telescopes and telescopes.
Things began to shift in the 17th and 18th centuries.
This period was known as the Age of Enlightenment.
Ooh, and I guess astrology was seen as not so enlightened.
Anyway, science and logic were in.
Superstition was out, and astrology was thought to fall into the Superstition camp.
And this is where astrology and astronomy part ways, they break up, they divorce.
They were no longer considered the same thing, and whether deserved or not astrology started
getting a bum wrap.
The ideas of the enlightenment were all the rage for a pretty long time, but by the 1800s,
the focus started to shift from science back to superstition.
You know?
We missed that a little bit, which really ends up setting the stage for what comes next.
Spiritualism.
Oh.
Well, we got a pause for an ad break, hold on.
OK.
So let's jump forward in time to the 19th century.
March 31st, 1848, to be exact.
The birth of spiritualism.
What's that you ask?
Well, spiritualism was a movement or religion that believed in talking to the dead.
This was largely done through mediums, who are essentially experts at talking to the
dead.
Now if some of you are thinking this is like a little, you know, woo-woo out there,
let me tell you, that by the end of the 1800s,
it's estimated that four to seven million people
in United States were spiritualists.
That's a lot, Chatton with the spirits,
spiritualism and astrology may seem unrelated,
but go with me here for a second,
because the two of them, they tie together.
So the ideas behind spiritualism
are believed to have evolved from two 18th century Europeans. So they weren't specifically psychics
or astrologers, but their ideas led to a huge advancement in their popularity.
So let me introduce you to them. Come on out you guys. The first guy was an
Austrian doctor named Franz Anton Mesmer. Franz put patience into a hypnotic state called mesmerized.
As in mesmerizing, yeah, that's right.
The word mesmerizing comes from his name.
Then he would rebalance their magnetic fluid.
Oh yeah.
You see, Franz theorized that there was this invisible fluid
that connected everything in the universe.
And if it becomes a balance in the body, someone could get sick.
This idea was originally known as animal gravitation. It later evolved to animal magnetism.
So, France is responsible for that term too.
Meanwhile in Sweden, a manual, Swedenborg, a
philosopher and mystic, was developing his theory about an afterlife with
multiple levels, three heavens, three hells, and an interim level. You see, he
thought we needed three heavens and three hells because all the souls in the
universe needed to be accounted for, and there just wasn't enough room and like
just one, okay?
We got to have three.
As for the interim level, the world of the spirits was where people went when they died
and was pretty much like Earth.
So it's like limbo.
Great.
So what do emmanials and france idea have to do with psychics or astrology, right?
Well, a 19th century American seer named Andrew Jackson, Davis,
gotcha, Andrew Jackson Davis, combined their ideas and created a little
something called spiritualism. Andrew claimed that he manuals spoke to him from
beyond while he was mesmerized and he wrote these conversations down and
published them in 1847. Later he claimed, quote,
spirits commune with one another while one is in the body and the other is in the higher spheres.
And on March 31st, 1848, the day Andrew said his theory was proven,
spiritualism burst onto the scene. So let me introduce you to two sisters who best
embody early spiritualism. 14-year-old Marguerreta and 11-year-old Catherine Fox.
Now Marguerreta was known as Maggie,
and Catherine was known as Kate.
Great names that are easy, we love that.
And the pair became known as the Fox sisters,
even better, easier to pronounce.
Maggie and Kate were the daughters of John D. Fox
and Margaret Fox. John was a blacksmith
and Margaret was a superstitious housewife. And I guess like John and Margaret decided to relocate
from Rochester to Hyde'sville, New York. And this new house had a very unique quality. You see,
there was like nightly knocking on the walls in furniture. Some say these sounds were the spirit of a murdered peddler
who'd been buried in the cellar.
Others say it was the precocious fox sister
playing tricks on their gullible mother.
I guess Maggie and Kate had successfully convinced their mom
that the sounds were actually otherworldly.
People found out about this alleged haunting
and started to swarm the house to see it for themselves.
For the girl's safety, the family left.
Maggie and Kate were sent back to Rochester where their older sister Leah lived.
This decision would change the course of history because it was in Rochester that Maggie and
Kate's alleged ability to communicate with the dead went big time.
So a story started floating around Rochester that Maggie and Kate were in touch with a man
who had been murdered five years earlier and they wanted a demo of their own.
The people of Rochester, I mean, they wanted proof.
So there were prominent community members whose daughter had recently died and everybody
thought, like, oh, this is the perfect opportunity for the
fox sisters to show off their medium powers, right? So this couple rented the biggest hall in
Rochester, invited 400 guests, and like let the sisters do their thing. Now everyone in the hall
that night agreed that they heard sounds they believed to be from the other side. But I mean, they were still skeptical.
After the performance, as we're gonna call it,
the sisters were stripped and searched
to prove they weren't using any tricks
to convince people that they were communicating with the dead.
They didn't find anything, I don't know what they're looking for.
What are they gonna find?
Exactly.
They didn't find anything.
And enough people, I guess, were convinced.
Regardless of what you believe, the history books
show that the sisters became quite the phenomenon.
The Fox sisters, including Leah, who
had picked up the family gift, I guess, hit the road.
They were performing say-onses and spreading
the gospel of spiritualism.
They became very famous, very quickly.
And one of their most famous supporters
was Mary Todd Lincoln, who had recently lost a son
to Typhoid fever.
When she heard about the fox sisters,
she immediately began holding seances at the White House.
Woooow, spooky!
The sisters were totally pop culture,
sort of the seers of their day.
With their names splashed all over the headlines,
people were coming from far and wide,
just to get close to these freaking incredible ass sisters,
they want to see this shit.
But of course, there's always gonna be naysayers, right?
One of the sisters biggest skeptics was a man,
of course, it was a man,
named Alicia Kent
Cain, who ironically was also one of Maggie's biggest admirers.
What a weirdo.
In 1856, Alicia convinced Maggie to give up her spiritualist ways, and he was like, hey,
you should become a Catholic so we can get married.
Unfortunately, Alicia died not long after the marriage.
Mm, rough.
I guess she hadn't gotten around to his request
to become a Catholic before he died,
but she went through with it after he passed,
which is honestly very sweet of her.
But kind of weird because Alicia himself was a Presbyterian.
Yeah, I'm plucked with.
Anyway, even though her husband was gone now, Maggie still kept her distance from spiritualism,
and instead she turned to the bottle and started drinking.
A lot.
Kate, on the other hand, married a spiritualist and really started to fine tune her skills.
You can even say that in the world of spiritualism, Kate was a trailblazer.
It said she could transcribe
messages backwards and talk to one spirit while writing down a message from another.
She could also hold up a blank card and have words from a spirit miraculously appear.
What? Yeah. One of these card spirits was supposedly Ben Franklin. Yeah, he popped in.
The popularity of spiritualism continued to soar with the help of the Civil War. of these card spears was supposedly Ben Franklin. Yeah, he popped in.
The popularity of spiritualism
continued to soar with the help of the Civil War.
I mean, so many people had lost their loved ones,
and spiritualism offered the possibility
of contacting them.
By this point, okay, so originally to talk to the ghosts,
they would kind of like tap and make noises and stuff.
Well, Kate, she graduated from that shit.
She was like, okay, that's lame.
Now she was like, I don't know,
conjuring fully formed ghosts right on stage.
In other words, she upped her performance.
I shouldn't say performance because what if it is real?
I don't know.
Spiritualism became so popular,
it spread all the way to the UK.
And no real surprise here, Kate and Leah took the UK by storm.
But the pressure got to Kate, right?
And like her sister, she turned to the little boo ski.
Alcohol, the bottle.
Meanwhile, Leah, she was thriving.
She worked the money and opportunity to her advantage, and she landed
herself a place in high society. She also landed herself a husband, a Wall Street banker.
She made out good for her.
By this time's virtualism was so widely popular that no one in those high society circles
were phased. Honestly, it seemed like Leah was unstoppable,
but things did come to a head on October 21st, 1888,
when New York World, a popular newspaper,
published a very scandalous interview
with her sister, Maggie.
Mm.
Apparently Maggie was pissed at Leah
and other big-time spiritualists because I don't know.
They had like publicly accused Kate of being an unfit mother and called her out on her drinking.
So, to get revenge, Maggie accused Leah of having exploited her younger sisters.
But she really crossed the line when she called spiritualism a fraud and revealed the tactics she and Kate had employed to fool everyone.
God damn it girl, you rat! Maggie recanted a year later but her and Kate's
reputations were already ruined. As was her relationship with her sister Leah.
Leah died two years later in 1890 and Kate succumbed to alcoholism on July 1st 1892 and then
Maggie she died eight months later. Dang boom boom boom. But spiritualism didn't die with
the fox sisters it continued to thrive. In fact prominent figures like the Nobel Prize-winning
author William Butler Yates and visionary psychologist Carl Young,
used aspects of it in their work.
Part of the legacy of spiritualism
may be that horoscopes began to appear
in newspapers regularly, and fortune tellers
became more prominent.
But the age of spiritualism may also be y astrology
and psychics have become synonymous with frauds.
Because of the fox sisters and others like them, many people were hellbent on disproving
them.
And for one man, it became an obsession.
But first, we're going to pause for an ad break.
And we're back.
Now there was one man so determined to prove spiritualism was fake that many believed it
played a part in his own demise.
So enter to the scene, Eric Vice, but the world knows him better as a Harry Houdini.
Maybe you heard of him?
The world famous magician?
Hello.
Yeah.
Harry was born on March 24th, 1874 in Budapest, Hungary.
He and his family moved to Ableton, Wisconsin. When Harry was four, Harry's father was a rabbi
who dabbled in soap making, but his mom is much more important for the purpose of the
story. You see, like Johann's Kepler, Harry was a bit of a mama's boy, and when his mommy died of a stroke on July 17th, 19th, 13th,
it sent the poor guy and she just tailspin.
Rumor has it, he even consulted mediums
and partook in say ounces in order to try to communicate with her,
but I guess they all failed.
So this may have been what ignited his crusade
to not just debunk psychics and mediums,
but to actually criminalize them.
We're not really 100% sure why Houdini was so hell-bent
on destroying spiritualism.
But what we do know for sure is that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
who wrote the Sherlock home series,
had a very public disagreement with Houdini
on the subject of communicating with the den.
Arthur and Houdini, I guess they were buds, despite the fact that Arthur was a spiritualist.
But their friendship hit the skids when Arthur's wife claimed to have communicated with Houdini's
mom.
Now Houdini accused Arthur's wife of lying because the message she relied was in English.
Houdini's mom spoke five languages,
but none of them were English.
So Arthur countered that mediums receive messages
in the languages that they understand.
And Houdini was like, mm, mm, mm, nope, that's not true.
Nope.
So I guess things got ugly fast.
While Arthur tried to promote spiritualism,
Houdini dedicated himself to taking it and Arthur down.
I'm sure there's more to the story. I bet you Houdini tried to get with the wife
and the wife was like, I don't want you. And then he's probably like, yeah,
fuck you then, and you tried to destroy her. I'd bet money.
Yeah. Anyways, and things got especially dirty in 1924. Arthur got the well-respected
magazine Scientific American to sponsor a contest, offering a cash price to anyone who could
prove they were communicating with the spear world under strict conditions. Scientific American
was known for revealing hoaxes, which is probably why Arthur picked them.
Well there was one medium by the name of Marjorie Crandon,
who like really impressed the room.
People said if she was faking it,
then she was a magician on the order of Houdini himself.
Now Houdini was actually a member of the jury
for this contest, but he was still worried
his influence wouldn't be enough to prove she was a fraud.
In fact, he was so worried scientific American would award her the prize, he wrote a 40-page
treatise entitled, Houdini exposes the tricks used by Boston medium marjorie to just sway
them.
Could you imagine if you put this much effort into something productive?
Wow.
That'd be cool.
So Houdini got his way, and Marjorie didn't get the price.
It's funny because like, geez, what are we doing? You know, but that was enough for him. He wanted more.
For the next few years, Houdini added a bit to his act devoted to disproving Marjorie and even
made a pamphlet he gave to audiences, revealing how she did all of her tricks. Total dick move.
But Marjorie wasn't the only one
who Dini went after.
The man was on a mission to discredit,
freaking everybody.
Who Dini though was also all about tricks.
It just doesn't make sense, who Dini?
Who Dini went after hundreds of spiritualists
over the course of 35 years.
And he even testified before a congressional subcommittee in 1926 about the evils of psychics,
astrologers, and mediums employing members to pass legislation, criminalizing them.
Who Dini, you are so too faced, you little bitch, he's over here doing tricks and magic.
Too faced, you little bitch. He's over here doing tricks and magic. And he's calling these people, no, mm-hmm, who did he? No.
No. Thank you. During these hearings, who did he openly called Arthur, one of the greatest
doops. And that's maybe one of the nicer things he said during the four days of testimony.
Always the performer, who Dini began his testimony
by presenting his sealed telegram.
Now he asked one of the hundreds of psychics and astrologers
present to tell him what was written in the telegram.
Everyone remained silent, except for Illinois,
Congressman Frank Reed, who accurately predicted what was inside.
Even though he was there as a representative and not a psychic,
Houdini dismissed Frank's answer as a guess. He's like, no, no, shh, you shut up.
He told Frank, I'm not talking to you, bud, okay? But Frank said, dude, I've got the gift, okay?
And things got even more tense from here.
For four days straight, there was fighting and sensational headlines.
Houdini, who was always a performer first, even used props and his takedowns, including
a 50-foot long scroll. There were breaks in the hearings meant to restore order, but they
just led to fights in the hallway. In restore order, but they just led to fights
in the hallway.
In the end, most people sided with these psychics and astrologers who thought Houdini was just
being frickin' over-traumatic, okay?
One congressman even said, quote, I believe in Santa Claus, and I believe in various.
But Houdini is taking the matter entirely just too seriously." End quote.
So yeah, Houdini ended up looking kind of foolish.
Even though Houdini failed in his attempt to have fortune-telling banned,
the image of spiritualism had been severely tarnished.
Just six months after testifying before Congress, Houdini died.
His death was predicted by one of the women he testified against during the congressional hearings.
Talk about...is that ironic?
Yeah...sorry, that's funny.
That's actually really funny.
Ironic.
In fact, there is a rumor that Sykes had a hand in Houdini's death,
which I don't know if that's true or not, but the timing.
You know, it's a little, it's a little of a fish.
Some believe his hate towards mediums was just about
not being able to communicate with his mother, remember?
Just a thought, maybe psychics and astrologers didn't stand up to
Houdini's testing because the way they work is fundamentally
different to his approach and a view of the world.
Just because he didn't understand it doesn't mean it's not understandable.
Whether or not you agree with Houdini and the others who tried to defame psychics and astrologers,
there were still like a lot of believers, and can't they just have something nice?
President Coolidge for one was said to have sayances in the White House.
In addition to Mary Todd from earlier, first ladies Edith Wilson and Nancy Reagan consulted
psychics too. I heard Nancy Reagan had like a psychic on payroll. That's pretty cool.
Well, it turns out three years after Houdini's suspicious demise, some research didn't
emerge. Studies showed that astrologers may have been right
about a person's health being impacted
by when they were born.
Allegedly, when we're born, can it termin the likelihood
we'll have certain diseases and disorders
like schizophrenia, multiple sclerosis, sleep disorders,
type one diabetes bipolar disorder and allergies. I mean, you're probably
thinking that doesn't sound real. That's not real. It just sounds like some bad science.
I'm like, the olden days. Well, over 200 studies since then have reiterated these findings.
Oh, shit. Including one from 2003 that included over 86 million births
from 27 different parts of the world.
Some doctors like to shrug this off
is just like, I don't know, seasonal effective disorder.
But isn't that like what astrologers have been saying all along?
Hurry up, look up November.
What am I gonna die of?
Environmental factors, including things beyond our own
knowing and understanding impact our lives.
So maybe this is why astrology and psychics
didn't go away altogether.
It continued to be seen in like really high places.
I mean, Hitler loved it.
He's like, yeah, bring it on.
Oh, before we get to that though,
we should pause for an ad break.
Shit. Bring it on. Oh, before we get to that though, we should pause for an ad break.
Shit.
Despite its ups and downs, astrology continued to be seen in some very high places.
That's when we were going to bring in the none other than Mr. Adolf Hitler himself.
Yep, I guess he consulted.
No, I don't guess.
We know.
He consulted the most famous astrologer of the time.
Eric Jan Hanussen. I tried with that one.
Numbers times between 1932 and 1933, he was consulting.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Eric predicted success for Adolf. Yikes. I mean, you know, if you were
psychic, would you tell Hitler things weren't going
to end well for him? Fun fact, Eric was Jewish. Not so fun fact, Adolf had him killed when
he found out that's fucked up. Well, I mean, he was a pretty fucked up guy. Psychics
and astrologers continued to have their highs and lows over the years. In the 60s and 70s,
the new age movement brought them back in the spotlight for a bit.
President Carter even ordered the CIA to assess psychic abilities, and in the 80s, the
Pentagon spent major cash exploring the paranormal.
That's cool.
Then in the 90s, TV psychics became huge, big.
I mean, whoo.
Yep. And perhaps the most infamous one was Yori Del Harris.
AKA Miss Cleo.
Oh, Miss Cleo.
Yeah, remember?
We all, you remember.
In the 90s, she had a massive famous psychic hotline
and the psychic readers network. But honestly, she was a cultural phenomenon for a while.
Despite the numerous accusations, Yuri maintained that she was a voodoo priestess up until her
death.
Another media darling who fell hard in the 90s was TV psychic Sylvia Brown.
Did you ever watch Montele Williams?
Remember that show?
Well, she was like a regular on that show.
I loved when she came on.
Yeah.
I guess her predictions were rarely accurate,
but I don't care, I still watched.
Many people accused her of adding to their suffering.
Perhaps most famously, she told a woman whose daughter
was missing that her daughter was dead,
but I guess the woman's daughter was later rescued.
That's a good thing to be wrong about.
Yeah, on the bright side.
So all of this feeds into that stereotype that psychics and astrologers are schemers and frauds.
Just because one person got it wrong, we can't discredit everybody.
Okay. Maybe part of the problem is
legitimizing psychics and astrology is that the biggest flops seem to be like the most famous ones.
Maybe many mediums and psychics, especially like the most gifted ones, would rather stay anonymous.
Because of psychics and astrologers are all a bunch of frauds. Why are they regularly consulted by a law enforcement? Why are they even still
around if they're still just frauds? I mean, they've been around forever. There's gotta be something
there, right? Oh, but circling back to that, yeah. The United States Department of Justice itself
wrote a report saying psychics have long been and will undoubtedly continue to be involved in
unsolved criminal investigations.
In the report, they acknowledged that a New Jersey resident, Dorothy Allison, has helped
police in thousands of cases.
A CIA study revealed that eight out of 11 officers interviewed said information from psychics
was helpful, and three of those psychics helped officers find missing bodies.
Even two of the officers who said the psychics weren't helpful acknowledged that the information
provided by them was accurate.
Why are predictions about things like the economy and elections considered science and forecast
by psychics or astrologers considered pseudoscience?
Is one better than the other?
Or do both just fill a desire to believe we can know
and control the future?
If anything, I just hope, I think it just helps people.
Like, it helps alleviate anxiety.
The unknown is really scary.
We just want someone to tell us it's gonna be okay.
That's really all we want.
I just found out I'm gonna die of a disease.
So I'm booked. Don't look up what you're gonna die of. It's gonna all we want. I just found out I'm gonna die of a disease. So I'm booked.
Don't look up what you're gonna die of.
It's gonna ruin your day.
Okay, well, despite all of that,
belief in astrology and psychics is once again on the rise.
The thing is non-believers keep holding psychics
and astrology up to like the same standard as other sciences.
And maybe the reality is that it's much harder
to teach and much harder to do.
Maybe you're just not special and you're mad.
I'd be curious to see what we'd learn
if we invested the same resources
into psychics and astrology as, I don't know,
traditional sciences.
Maybe psychics and astrology would be more accepted.
Shit, maybe we could get stuff done, I don't know.
And it seems that all this doubting is a western thing anyway.
Indian families consult astrologers before making major life decisions.
Kaushen practitioners from the Chinese tradition are known to predict the future.
Never mind the millions of us who go to Syghix, energy workers, and astrologers every day. Followers of astrology believe that these stars and the planets influence people and events
on Earth, and we accept that the moon has a very real effect on the tides, and that gravity
has a very real effect on everything.
A psychics intuition, a fortune teller's predictions, or an astrologer's insights?
Eh, they're not much different than a cop's hunch.
So why is it so controversial for so many people to accept astrology?
Do we believe in it? Or don't we?
Should we be laughing at it? Or should we be like, hmm, I don't know, maybe there's something there.
If anything else, astrology, it seems to be giving people a lot of, of mind. Clarity, I don't know.
The future can be so scary.
Just let people have their peace.
If you believe it or not.
Right?
I don't know.
What's the harm in that?
Shit.
Let people live, goddamnit.
Woo! That was a ride-jone.
Did you see that? I fucking stumbled, tumbled, and...
Rumbled. Fuuuck.
That was a challenge.
Well everyone, thank you for learning with me today.
Remember, don't be afraid to ask questions to get the whole story because you deserve that.
Now I'd love to hear your reactions to today's story.
So make sure to use the hashtag darkhistory
so I can follow along and join me over on my YouTube
where you can watch these episodes on Thursday
after the podcast airs.
And also catch my murder mystery makeup
which drops on Mondays.
I hope you have a great day today.
You make good choices and I'll be talking to you next week.
Goodbye. Dark History is an audio boom original. I hope you have a great day today. You make good choices and I'll be talking to you next week. Goodbye!
Dark History is an audio boom original!
Woo!
This podcast is executive produced by Braley Sarian, Kim Jacobs, Dunia McNeely from Three
Arts, Ed Simpson, and Claire Turner from Willhouse DNA.
Produced by Lexi Kiven, Research provided by Tisha Dunston, Witer's Jed Book Out, Joyce Guvuzo, and Kim Yegid.
edited by Jim Luchi,
shot by Defazwa Nimmerundwey.
Special thank you to our historical consultants,
Alexander Boxer, author of a scheme of heaven,
the history of astrology, and the search for our destiny and data.
And I'm your host, Bailey Sarian.
Have a good day today.
Goodbye.