Dark History - 47: The Best of Dark History: The Joanie Awards

Episode Date: June 8, 2022

Dark History. It seemed like such a simple concept. Let’s talk about the things from history people didn’t talk about. And boy did we do that. We talked of things that were uncomfortable, things t...hat we’d never heard of, things that sounded too crazy to be true, and things that I couldn’t help but giggle at. Today we’re going to review all the stories, characters, and situations we’ve uncovered. And what’s the best way to do that, an award show of course! But not any old award show these are The Joanies. And beware, because most of this time these awards come with a cold, hard truth.  Episode Advertisers Include:  Liquid IV, Apostrophe, Hello Fresh,  and Sqaurespace. Learn more during the podcast about special offers!

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Ladies and gentlemen, Bailey Sarian presents Bailey Sarian in a Bailey Sarian joint. Bailey Sarian's dark history with Bailey Sarian and Joan. Great, great, great. Hi friends, how are you today? Look, my name is Bailey Sarian and I like to welcome you to my award show. Thank you so much. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Thank you, hold the applause. Today we're doing something a little different. Why? Believe it or not, we're celebrating a year of dark history. Time flies, doesn't it? What a wild ride. It's been 365 days ago, we began this dark history journey that changed everything.
Starting point is 00:00:51 46 episodes, a streaming award. Did I tell you guys we want a streaming award? I'm so sorry, I think I forgot to mention, we want a streaming award. And nearly 100 hours of intense psychotherapy later. Okay, we bring you the first annual Jonia Awards. Thank you for coming.
Starting point is 00:01:09 Come embark on this journey honoring the darkest histories we've told over the past year. And here's your host, me, Bailey Sarian. When we started down this road, I never would have imagined how much we'd learn. I mean, the experts would get to work with, and the piles of research it would take to get here. But we made it. And honestly, I think we're better for it.
Starting point is 00:01:39 I learned a lot. I don't know about you guys, but I learned a lot. So in honor of this accomplishment, I wanted to take a moment to take a look back at all the stories we've talked about. And the best way to do it, an award show, of course, but not just any award show. It's the Dark History Presents, the Joni Awards.
Starting point is 00:02:00 Yes, yes, yes. Some of these awards are going to be for some of the most courageous characters we've covered on this show, and some of them are going to be some of the real villains or douche can news, if you know what I mean. But mostly, this is just a chance for all of us here to have a little fun, because that's really the point. I think we need it, okay, because it's been pretty dark.
Starting point is 00:02:23 We've told some dark stories here We need a little giggle, don't we? Learning about history can get pretty dark pretty quick, but it can also be really really fun So let's get to it and hand out some Joni Awards Okay, my friends. Let's Joni, you ready girl? You look fabulous show off that outfit. Oh Yeah, Joni. Ooh, look at that. We're matching. Are you wearing feathers?
Starting point is 00:02:50 It's not going against your kind. Oh my God, you murderer. You're sick in the head. Okay, anyways, my God. One of the things that surprised me the most while I was researching this show was that there were so many important people present at important times in history that I personally had never heard of.
Starting point is 00:03:12 Remember Jackie Mitchell from the Women in History episode? If you don't, I would suggest you maybe listen to that episode. But she was a teenage girl who was a professional baseball player in the 1930s, who struck out freaking babe Ruth and Lou Garrig. That's huge and I honestly I had never heard of her. So this award is for people like her who should be a household name, but for some reason or not. So our first award today is the household name, Joni, and the nominees are Queen Lily Uokalani
Starting point is 00:03:49 from Hawaii, a real-life princess Leia. Queen Lily Uokalani saw the Hawaiian kingdom stolen by wealthy white businessmen, but decided to fight back by staging a rebellion. And even though the rebellion failed, her fight lives on today with the Hawaiian Sovereign Team movement. Rosetta Tharp from Rock and Roll. Sister Rosetta was a brilliant musician and trailblazer. I mean, her nickname is the godmother of rock and roll,
Starting point is 00:04:21 because she invented rock and roll as we know it today. But if you look at the most list of greatest guitarists ever, she is rarely mentioned. And that's a damn shame. Katrina Haslip from the AIDS epidemic. Katrina was a black HIV positive woman who ended up in prison. Instead of letting this destroy her, Katrina used it as an opportunity to change the lives of people who were HIV positive. Katrina became a jail house lawyer and fought back. Her activism didn't stop when she was released, and she ended up having a huge positive impact for people living with AIDS.
Starting point is 00:04:59 Fred Cody Matsu, from Japanese American concentration camps. Fred was a badass who ignored the Japanese incarceration orders from the US government and ended up launching a civil rights case that lasted over 40 years. Eventually it made its way to the Supreme Court and set in motion the events that led to the passage of the 1988 Civil Liberties Act, which forced the government to apologize to victims of Japanese incarceration. The Radium Girls From Radium Girls Thousands of women who worked at watch factories were exposed to a radioactive chemical called
Starting point is 00:05:37 Radium and died as a result. A group of them took their employer to court and won. Their fight and unfortunate death would have a major impact on labor laws all over the United States. And we still see some of the effects today. Bye! Yay! Thank you so much, magical hand. I am so excited to see what the judges picked.
Starting point is 00:06:01 I didn't pick these. So if you don't agree, don't come for me. Judges picked these. And the Joni goes to Katrina Haslop from the AIDS epidemic. Joni Clamp, I'm so booed. Katrina fought until the day she died to expand the definition of AIDS.
Starting point is 00:06:26 She also founded the AIDS Counseling and Education Program, ACE for short, to organize prisoners infected with HIV, who were just being ignored. Because of her efforts, way more people were given automatic access to medication, treatment benefits, housing, Medicare, and even civil rights protections.
Starting point is 00:06:46 Honestly, they all were amazing candidates. And we, yes. Great. Thank you, Katrina. Speaking of household names, our next award is for most appearances in dark history. Oh, yes, yes it is. This award will go to someone or something very familiar because we heard of them again and again. And then we heard of them a few more times. And then like again and again and again. Yeah,
Starting point is 00:07:16 you get it. Now it's worth mentioning that racism and misogyny are both most prominent in all of our episodes as they are throughout history. So they qualify for this award for sure, but we don't want them. We don't want none of that. They suck. That's what I'm saying. The winner of this award has stuck it to all of us, and we're still trying to dig our way out from under the shitstorm that this person created. So that's probably why they've appeared in so many episodes.
Starting point is 00:07:43 Let's hear our nominees. Thomas Edison, a Pisces, for his appearance in Radium Girls, Golden Age of Hollywood and his own episode, Richard Nixon, a Capricorn, for his appearances in Crack vs. Cocaine, Cannabis, Student Loans, and Private Prisons. Cifalus, she was discovered in 1495, the year of the rabbit.
Starting point is 00:08:08 She appeared in Tuskegee, Radium Girls, Dancing Plague, and Birth Control. Fun fact, she's just lurking in the backgrounds of jazz and prohibition as well. Some of you may even know her right now. Our old pal Andrew Bathsauce Jackson. Another Pisces, isn't that something weird? For his appearances in private prisons, cannabis,
Starting point is 00:08:33 trail of tears, residential schools, and his own episode, Ronald Reagan, oh man, he was in a lot, an Aquarius, Ronald Reagan. For his appearances in crack versus cocaine, private prisons, cannabis, student loans, the AIDS epidemic, and the Americans with Disabilities Act. New Orleans, this city was founded May 7, 1718. So it's a tourist, I guess, yes.
Starting point is 00:09:02 Somehow New Orleans has popped up seven times on this show in Andrew Jackson, private prisons, Sicilian lynchings, trail of tears, jazz, residential schools, and bananas, gumbo, binyes, marty-gros, and the largest slave market. What is going down there, y'all? Ah, thank you, hand. the largest slave market? What is going down there, y'all? Ah! Thank you, hand! Wow!
Starting point is 00:09:30 And the Joni, for most appearances, goes to... Ah! The 1800s? She was even nominated! Plot twist, everybody! This is a shocker! The 1800s? She was even nominated. Plot twist everybody. This is a shocker. The 1800s is the winner. Can you believe it? Figure out the 1800s.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Now it makes sense. I mean, in the 1800s, the United States had tons of bad shit going on. We were supposed to end slavery, but I, that didn't happen. I mean, there were a shitload of lynchings, lots of exploitation. Women? mean, there were a shitload of lynchings, lots of exploitation, women, oh, we were screwed, we had no rights then, you know. And a lot of people got rich at the expense of others. There was a lot of abuse going on, a lot of death, lots of death. Oh, and remember the circus, the circus also started in the 1800s. Now, for if it were up to me, I thought for sure, the month of March would steal the scene
Starting point is 00:10:29 because it seems like that was in all the stories, but okay, 1800s, you win. You win. Let's take a sip to that Cheers, bitches. Joni, you don't have one. Oh, your name's not Joni, it's the Joni Awards. Why is it named after you? You didn't even do anything except for just show up
Starting point is 00:10:48 and look you. I did all the work. Man. All right. Coming up next is everybody's favorite, toxic rebrands. Oh, it's the deja vu award. Then we're setting the record straight with the, wait, what?
Starting point is 00:11:04 Award. Scrooge McDick, a surprise appearance from Joey, the lighting guy, and stay tuned for the biggest award of the night, the douche canoe award. You don't want to miss this. You don't need shit around here girl. Hi, sorry we were just big green a little bit. Anyways, hi, welcome back. Did you have a great break? Me too. During break, I was googling why Facebook decided
Starting point is 00:11:30 to change their name to meta. And I found some bullshit about Zuckerberg thinking it was a better name for what the company wants to do. But I think social media changed the name because he was getting grilled by Congress. There have been plenty of instances on the show where someone thought if they just changed the name because he was getting grilled by Congress. There have been plenty of instances on the show where someone thought if they just changed the name, you know, no one would know all the shitty things they did. But we know.
Starting point is 00:11:54 We know. They didn't get away with it, okay? So let's call them out on their shit and their toxic rebrands. The nominees for most toxic rebrand are private prisons for when the corrections corporation of America changed their name to Core Civic. This was right after they built an immigrant detention center out of an old motel forced inmates to work for 18 hour days in the middle of summer without air conditioning and fired their guards while giving the inmates guns to police themselves. Change your name all you want, you're still profiting off keeping humans locked up in horrible
Starting point is 00:12:33 conditions. Next up, we have bananas for a United Fruit Company, changing their name to Chiquita, after their CEO committed suicide. Maybe it's not so good to head up a company accused of war crimes and violating counterterrorism loss. Chiquita is a cute name, but the rebrand didn't stop survivors from suing them. And, erase communities for Oscarville being blown up to make way for Lake Linear. This added insult to injury since the town survived months of riots that ended with countless murders of its black residents. Even though Oscar Ville was covered up by a lake,
Starting point is 00:13:12 we will not forget the horrible racism, pain and suffering that happened there. Love that! Okay everybody, and the award for most toxic rebrand goes to... Oh my god, erased communities! Wow! But this award's not just for Oscar, Villeney, Nay. This award is for all the erased communities we've covered on this show. I'm talking about Seneca Village, which became Central Park, Palo Verde, Lolo Ma, and Bishop, all of which were torn down to put up the Dodger Stadium, remember?
Starting point is 00:13:56 The Hawaiian Kingdom, which they say is the 50th state in the United States, but this is really its own sovereign state. And while we're at it, let's throw in Rosewood and the countless indigenous communities that have been eliminated. I mean, if you think about it, the entire United States of America is an erased community. Thank you so much, arm. 365 days ago, we began a shocking journey that changed everything. Wait, is anybody having a low deja vu too?
Starting point is 00:14:27 I feel like we've heard that all before. And that makes sense because the next Joni Award is the Daeshavu Award. Unfortunately, as we've seen time and time again on this show, history does end up repeating itself. Now, this award is going to acknowledge that unfortunate reality. Now, this award is going to acknowledge that unfortunate reality. So, the nominees are Yellow Journalism. Because sensationalized news has popped up again today with the rise of cable news and what we see on social media.
Starting point is 00:15:01 The news used to be, uh-uh, the news, but yellow journalism led to the facts mattering so little that a whole ass war was manufactured by some wealthy white dudes. Facts not mattering? Does that maybe sound a little familiar? A personal favorite, the 1900 Bubonic Plague outbreak in San Francisco. Remember that? Well, you should, because it's freaking COVID. But a hundred years ago, need I say more?
Starting point is 00:15:28 Oh my God. Next up, we have Eugenics. Eugenics wasn't actually an episode, but it's definitely a recurring theme in the archives of dark history. I'm talking about lobotomy, to birth control, to Americans with disabilities. It seems like a lot of the people in the US
Starting point is 00:15:44 were doing their nausea impersonation trying to create what they think is the master race. So this domination goes to an idea that has certainly seen its time come and go. Let's leave it in the past where it belongs, Goddamnit. Oh, I love this. Thank you so much. So the award for deja vu goes to my favorite, Bubonic Plegue in San Francisco. I'm so happy for you, Bubonic Plegue. You are having a moment in history.
Starting point is 00:16:23 The Bubonic outbreak and the COVID pandemic both started in China and sparked a lot of anti-Asian racism. The first trace of bubonic was found in March. I told you, fucking March, 1900. And COVID shut everything down in the United States in March, 2020. And if that's not enough, the California governor called buubonic a plague fake.
Starting point is 00:16:47 And Trump called COVID fake news. It's truly crazy how similar these stories are. Thank you so much. Don't go away. We'll be back with the wait, what? And Scrooge McDick Awards. And stay tuned for that Joey the Lighting Guy appearance, and the biggest award of the night, the Dush canoe award.
Starting point is 00:17:13 Now if you can't tell, the jones are starting to get real. We started light, it was easy breezy, and it was fun. But like history itself, things can take a turn and fast. So it's time to get into the darker stuff. We're talking about the stories we thought we knew. But it turned out, bitch, girl, motherfucker, we were so wrong. Okay, and we were like, so wrong. These are the stories that made me go, wait, what?
Starting point is 00:17:42 So here are the nominees for the Wait WHAT AWARD! Cannabis The thing that made my head explode is that weed became illegal because of a team of powerful white guys who were scared of how amazing the cannabis plant was. From paper to clothing to medicine, hemp was poised to change the world. The problem was that our green goddess threatened the investments of those powerful men. So they used racism and fear to criminalize it. Tuskegee, what I heard before I did this episode
Starting point is 00:18:15 was that the government was secretly injecting syphilis into black men. But the true story is that the government was literally watching black men die of syphilis for over 30 years. Even after penicillin was invented, and after the Nazis were tried for performing similar medical experiments, these men still weren't treated. Why?
Starting point is 00:18:39 To test the long-term effects of syphilis. Now, that's the definition of weight. What? The AIDS epidemic. Everything about this story is super crazy, but the most weight, what? Moment, for me, was the fact that the Reagan administration was literally laughing off the entire AIDS epidemic,
Starting point is 00:19:04 whether it was Dushkenew, Larry Speaks, or Ronnie Reagan himself. It seems like every member of this administration thought the idea of thousands of people dying slow, painful deaths was hilarious. And in case you missed it, just give it a Google. There are full audio recordings of the exchanges that will make you go. Wait, what? Hawaii. I mean, I thought Hawaii was a state and it turns out it's not. It's not. And there's been a whole lot of underhanded shit going on for decades to prevent the rightful
Starting point is 00:19:37 airs of the Hawaiian kingdom from taking it back. I was happy to find out there's a massive fight to make it so everybody in the world recognizes Hawaii as its own nation. Bananas! Bananas have given me a headache for, I don't know how long. So I suspect there was something suspicious going on in there, but I didn't suspect what we found. The overthrow of democratically elected governments, the Bay of Pigs, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. I mean, holy shit. All for bananas. That's the trifecta of weight.
Starting point is 00:20:12 What? And I know all this stuff from bananas was very weight. What? But after learning it all, I just can't believe a story is just cool being called Banana Republic. What is that about? Did anyone solve that one? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:20:30 Oh, thank you so much, envelope. And the journey for the wait, what goes to? Ooh, I'm excited. I don't know what this one is. Banana's! Oh my God. Ooh, I'm excited. I don't know what this one is. Bananas! Oh my god. Thank you, audience. I was trying to Google why bananas gave me a headache
Starting point is 00:20:55 and I found out that banana companies literally took over half of the freaking world. I mean, what the? Well, the closest the world has ever been to a nuclear war was because of the United States, the Soviet Union, and freaking bananas. The worst part is that if nuclear war happened, bananas they don't last that long. So they wouldn't even be good in a bomb shelter. The next worst part is, I still don't know why bananas give me a headache. The third worst part is, what's up with banana republic, the store? We'll circle back with that one.
Starting point is 00:21:33 And speaking of headache, business owners, am I right? I'm not talking about that cute couple who owns the bakery down the street. I'm talking about the heads of unregulated corporations who put profit before human lives. Most of the crazy-ass business owners we've covered on this show have a few things in common. They're wealthy, they're white, and they're cartoonishly evil. You know who else's sounds like.
Starting point is 00:22:01 Scrooge McDuck, but these guys are real. So let's call these money bags of shit, Scrooge McDuck, but these guys are real. So let's call these money bags of shit, Scrooge McDix. The nominees for the Scrooge McDick Award are T. Don Hudo for Private Prisons. Not only did Don Hudo revolutionize the private prison game, but he cashed in and got into immigrant detention, making the United States a way worse place. He's so evil that we didn't even have time to cover all the atrocities in the episode.
Starting point is 00:22:33 Like did you know that Dom started something called prison rodeos where inmates play poker in the middle of an arena while huge snorting bulls sprint at them? Well, shit. Last one sitting at the table wins. an arena while huge snorting bulls sprint at them. Well, shit. Last one sitting at the table wins. Now this is like, we're very serious right now. Google it, look it, look it up right now.
Starting point is 00:22:54 These rodeos still happen two day. So even though Don Hudo died in 2021, his gruesome legacy lives on and he did it all for the money. The shirt waist kings for Triangle shirt waist. Max and Isaac remember the guys who locked one of the only exits in the factory because they were afraid their workers would steal a shirt waist. I didn't spend too much time talking about what they were doing during the fire, but they were on the floor above the raging inferno and managed to escape.
Starting point is 00:23:30 After they escaped, they immediately went on a PR recovery tour, saying they weren't at fault for anything. So the workers' death were the fault of their own. Super cool shirt waist kings. These dudes lived a long life after the fire and were never able to relive their glory as the shirt waist kings. So maybe there's an ounce of justice
Starting point is 00:23:54 in dark history after all? Maybe, you know. P.T. Barnum for the circus. Don't let the movie the greatest showman fool you. P.T. Barnum was a grimy son of a gun and looked nothing like Hugh Jackman. His family called him tail, as in tall tails, which is fitting because PT was mostly full of shit. His career and entertainment began by exploiting a legal loophole that allowed him to lease a paralyzed black woman. Then he paraded her around New York,
Starting point is 00:24:26 spouting an untrue story about her age and history. From there, this tycoon's reign of chair was highlighted by exploiting people, horrific train wrecks, not paying his workers, and grotesque animal abuse. Greatest show on Earth, it is not. Minor Cooper Keith for bananas. Minor went to Costa Rica to start a railroad, well it failed, but in the process hundreds of people lost their lives,
Starting point is 00:24:53 including his own uncle and brothers. So he turned to bananas, and countless more deaths seem to follow. Minor paved the way for other assholes like Sam the banana man who took over where Minor left off. Minor is so despised that almost 50 years after his death a Colombian artist built a monument of a pissed off machete-wilding banana worker as a memorial. It said the monument faces North because that's the direction of Brooklyn, New York, where Minor was buried. Ooh! Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:25:28 Sabian von So Shockey for Radium Girls. Dr. Sabian is an interesting one because he was a scientist, and normally we love them. But this guy was also a businessman with a thirst for green, and he knew what he was doing wrong. For instance, he convinced the workers of his New Jersey watch studio that the radium paint they were using was in poisonous, even though he knew it was. He was also known to take tiny vials of radium and roll them around in his fingers because he thought it was fascinating. Unsurprisingly, after all of this, Dr.
Starting point is 00:26:06 Sabium died of radium poisoning in 1928. Lou Perlman from Boy Bands. Where do we even start with this guy? From creating a huge Ponzi scheme to committing male, bank, and wire fraud? Not to mention, alleged assault. This slopphouse may be responsible for the Boy B band craze of the 90s and 2000s, but he's also responsible for wildly inappropriate behavior with underage boys that had some parents claiming he was a sexual predator. One of my personal favorites we have, DuPont. We didn't know the CEO in this one, so we're just going to say to do all of Japan. Fucked up shit is so ingrained in that company, there's no one to point a finger at.
Starting point is 00:26:50 They're all too blame. Depends products are literally poison and they know it. PFOAs are just the beginning. The company is like a James Bond villain, but with more money and more connections. Cover ups, scandals, poisoning and water supplies. Like come on you guys, cut that shit out. But they just keep going and going and going. If there was ever a company due for a toxic rebrand,
Starting point is 00:27:16 it's them. Thank you. And the winner is... Really? Wait, T-don Hudo for private prisons! Wow, okay. I mean, Dom was so freaking evil there wasn't enough time in his episode to get into all the evil shit he did.
Starting point is 00:27:42 Torturing prisoners, strip searches, starvation, blasting cold air, and extended stays in dark rooms with no windows. T. Don also ran a prison where a kid was murdered. I mean, human rights violations go lore. I don't know how you get much darker than him. When you hear the phrase prison industrial complex, never forget that T. Don Hudo had a huge hand in making it the problem that it is today.
Starting point is 00:28:10 Thank you T. Don Hudo for being shitty. Get away, hand. Coming up next, all the time Stark history has made an impact on the world. Biggest what the fuck moments, and stay tuned for the douche canoe award. Unfortunately, Joey the lighting guy can't make it tonight. He died choking on an apple. Hi, hello, welcome back. We're in the home stretch now,
Starting point is 00:28:38 coming up on the biggest awards of the night. The next award goes to the story that made a difference. You know, one of the goals of dark history is to show that history isn't as boring as it's sometimes seemed in school. It has a direct impact on our lives. If we're being honest, pretty much every episode had an impact in some way or another. And since I can't just retell every story, there are a couple I'd like to highlight again before we get to the award.
Starting point is 00:29:05 A huge thank you to the ACLU for giving us a shout out on our conversion therapy and carceration camps, private prisons, and residential schools episode. Thank you. Huge, that's huge. We were so proud when that happened. We were so proud when that happened. We were so proud. Mm-hmm. These are stories about large groups of people
Starting point is 00:29:28 who were villainized just for being who they are. And the ACLU sharing them on social media made it possible for these stories to reach a bigger audience and be heard by even more people. And it wasn't just the ACLU. In particular, I want to give a shout out to the Residential Schools Commons section on YouTube. So many survivors and family members of survivors shared their amazing stories and the stories of their families who went through
Starting point is 00:29:53 the same atrocities described in that episode. Throughout all of North America, thousands of Indigenous children were ripped away from their homes and put into these schools. They were forced to give up their culture and identities, many even lost their lives. Residential schools had by far the most heartwarming and heartbreaking comment section of the whole series. So I want to say thank you to each, each and every one of you for sharing your stories. That's so nice. Another story that had a huge impact was our very first episode to PONT. We didn't start the conversation about this slimy company, but thanks to all of you listening
Starting point is 00:30:36 out there, more people now know just how harmful PFOAs are. And that's great. But in terms of sheer impact, there's one story in which dark history has truly made a difference. And that story is Rosewood. Dark history can mean different things to different people, but I look at it as having two meanings. It could mean something dark as an awful or something that's been buried and needs to see the light of day. The Rosewood Massacre is the perfect example of a story that fits both of those definitions. It recounts the horrific story about a white
Starting point is 00:31:11 mob destroying a predominantly black town. It's so awful and hard to believe something positive can even come out of something so disturbing. But after we aired this episode, you, our listeners, our amazing listeners, got together and helped us raise funds for the Rosewood Foundation. With the money raised from this campaign, the last surviving structure from the town where the massacre took place is going to be relocated in order to create a memorial and living history museum.
Starting point is 00:31:40 But the work isn't done yet. The Real Rosewood Foundation is still accepting donations today. You can contribute at the Real Rosewood Florida dot WordPress dot com. I'll also leave it down in the description box. Okay, here we go. The final three awards of the night. Have you ever listened to Dark History and thought to yourself, WTF, I did not know that.
Starting point is 00:32:03 Because this is my show, I do a lot a lot a lot like when we talked about mk ultra and how I learned about how the CIA bought literally all of the global LSD supply sound like a party I didn't know that right at the center of the story was a cute little robo kitty all remember the robo kitty the cat they sowed a microphone into, but didn't train. So he ended up prancing into traffic and dying. I'm not laughing at that, but like, it's kind of funny. My point is, this next award is for the moment that really made me go WTF. More than any other story.
Starting point is 00:32:43 Here are the nominees. The Move Bombings. In 1985, the Philly Police decided to evict the activist organization Move in the most horrible way possible by dropping two bombs on their home in a residential neighborhood in the middle of a major city. Because of this, 11 people died. 61 houses were destroyed and 250 were left homeless. Not to mention the ramifications of neighborhood and survivors are still dealing with almost 40 years later. Here's a gross dark history tie-in.
Starting point is 00:33:19 Guess who the manufacturer of those bombs were? DuPont. We see you DuPont, we fucking feel. The manufacture of those bombs were too pond. We see you do pond, we fucking feel. Next up, the Triangle Shirt Waste Fire. Those dick weasels were so worried about employees stealing clothes from the Triangle Shirt Waste Factory, they locked the door of one of the only exits on their floor. When a fire broke out, countless workers, mostly women, rushed the only exit, but most of them
Starting point is 00:33:47 couldn't fit through the door. The pure panic in chaos led to the deaths of 123 women and 23 men, all while the shirt-waist kings managed to escape with their lives and with zero jail time. Who knew the birth control pill was a racist creation invented to help with population control? Countless women were forced into sterilization during the birth control pill trials in Puerto Rico. It devastated the fertility of an entire nation. In fact, today, Puerto Rico has these six lowest fertility rate on Earth. So yeah, the birth control pill experiment created shockwave still felt today. We all know drug companies can
Starting point is 00:34:31 be quite evil, but this evil. And with the beloved birth control pill, truly jaw dropping. Now this story is when I had no idea even existed and until this show. And it is one of the craziest, darkest ones. The Sicilian lynchings was very much so a WTF moment. Back in 1890, the beloved chief of police was gunned down in cold blood, and his killing set off a chain of events that led to 20,000 people literally losing their minds. They stormed the streets, targeted every Italian immigrant they could find, and ended up breaking into an armed prison to lynch nine Sicilian
Starting point is 00:35:12 men, with no proof other than racism. The doctors' riots were fricking nuts. Remember when doctors were systematically hunted down because they were robbing graves so they could dissect the bodies of the formerly enslaved. Oh, you know what? I actually forgot about that until right now. That was wild! And that dude waved a severed arm out the window to scare that little kid, remember? Yeah, I forgot about that. Yep, I remember. All of this happened 12 years after the United States became a country. So yeah, the bar was low from the get go.
Starting point is 00:35:48 All of these stories and so many of the others we've covered are bat shit bananas. Just truly absolutely insane. The cigarette diet from diet culture, student loans killing the financial future of millions, people having to crawl up to the steps of Congress just to get equal rights with the ADA. I mean, all that shit with Nestle, woof. And where the fuck the dancing plague was, am I right? What was that? But the winner of this category goes to a story that's so nuts, yet so unknown to most of us. I mean, you can't even find most of the information online. Thank you so much, Hand, or arm.
Starting point is 00:36:30 The doctors thing, you get it? Yeah, you get it. All right, and the winner is... Oh my gosh. Okay, come on up here, move bombing. All right, Frank Rizzo, you don't get a gift basket. You get the fuck outta here. Goodbye.
Starting point is 00:36:52 Thank you. Now, I know we all have our favorite episodes of our favorite series. I know my favorite episode of Jerry Springer was the one where the Goth Clan revealed to the preppy elephant. he was his biological father. I was like, what the fuck is with the circus theme? And then Jerry got share thrown at him.
Starting point is 00:37:13 Yeah, I know television. I love it. Anyway, I hope you have some dark history favorites yourself. If you do, please let me know down below. I asked our Academy to vote on some of their dark history favorites, and here's what they came up with. Our first nominee is... Sicilian lynchings. That's a favorite, you guys, or sick.
Starting point is 00:37:35 Remember that's the murder of a beloved police chief that ends up with 20,000 people storming the streets, harassing Italian immigrants, then breaking into an armed prison to lynch nine Sicilian men? Yeah. The next nominee is the Americans with Disabilities Act. I really like this episode because it's the rare story that ends on a note of hope. All the events we talked about on the way to make the ADA happen from the 504 sit-in to the Capitol crawl,
Starting point is 00:38:04 made me feel okay about the world for once. Next up we got our girl cannabis. This episode was all about the green goddess and the journey from her birthplace in Central Asia all the way to her criminalization in the United States. And let me tell you, it was a wild ride seeing how much people loved her, how much she changed the world, and how much the United States was like, nah, fuck that. But this one was like a greatest hits of dark history. No list of favorite episodes is complete without lobotomy. That one has everything,
Starting point is 00:38:39 sketchy Kennedy shit, a surgeon who didn't believe in germs, forced lobotomies on queer people, and even Joey, the lighting guy. When you think of dark history as a whole, this episode's really got it all. Our final nominee is menstruation, which is a hard thing to call a favorite because you know it's not really the best thing ever. Kinda sucks. Not the episode, but menstruation itself. But it was important to learn about so many cultures
Starting point is 00:39:06 and so many people still view it as something too high to be embarrassed about. Stop the shame and grab the toads. Remember the toads? You remember the toads. All right, the award goes to, thank you disembodied arm. There's nothing inside, it's empty.
Starting point is 00:39:29 I'm choosing menstruation. Oh! Oh! Oh! Come on up here menstruation, get your little ass over here. That's right, menstruation was one of my favorites because of the idea that we're wizards.
Starting point is 00:39:46 You're a wizard Harry. Anybody remember the wizards, the frogs, the shoving random stuff of our hoo-ha? I don't know, I still love it. Thank you. Coming up next, the final award of the night, the douche canoe. And now, a moment of silence for Joey, the lighting guy. Welcome back to the first annual Jony Awards. Thank you for joining us.
Starting point is 00:40:28 We've come to the final award of the night. The grand mama of them all. The Dusk-Know award. Sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, sana, Pshhh, naa,, shhhhhhh, nice. This is our Dusk-Know award. How do you like it, Joan? Amazing.
Starting point is 00:40:53 I know the suspense is killing everyone. Who is going to be the winner of the first Dusk-Know award 2022? And in case it needs explaining, the douche canoe award goes to the person who showed us time and time again that they're the biggest fucking douche of all the douches. And let me be clear, I'm using this title for the award to keep things fun and light. But don't get me wrong, all these nominees have done some massively atrocious things throughout time, so like, okay. Their shitty actions have had ripple effects throughout generations, many of which, if not all, are still felt today. Without further adieu, the winner is...oh
Starting point is 00:41:38 that. And this year's winner goes to a man who needs no introduction. I mean, he adorns the walls of Congress. There are statues of him across the good all-united states of America, and many of us carry his face around in our pockets. That's right, the douche canoe award goes to King, deem himself, Andrew freaking basaltz Jackson. Come on up and get your award, Andrew. Wait, you can't because you're dead. Hell yeah. Before people get all up in arms about him being a president or whatever, just remember, the amount of destruction and blood on this guy's hands.
Starting point is 00:42:30 Come on you guys, just remember that shit. From cheating in duels like a psycho to raking it up and down the Carolinas, to finding a baby and forcing it to become his son. This racist frontiersman turned lawyer, turned gambler, turned judge who couldn't hear the word no, stole more land than climate change. The handy work of this year's douche canoe award winner led to both the Indian Removal Act and the Trail of Tears.
Starting point is 00:43:00 I mean, the man destroyed the freaking economy in the private prison's episode too. And a solid argument can be made for residential schools as well. It's like the phrase, he's a fucking douche, was coined specifically for him. There you go, Andrew. Thank you. Wow, what a year it's been. First of all, I want to thank you for joining me on this journey
Starting point is 00:43:26 down the silk roads of dark history. We left, we cried, or threw up a little in my mouth. Oh, I sweat a lot because it gets real hot in this room. Man, anyway, sometimes we got drunk and sometimes it was a legal prohibition babe. But that's dark history. I
Starting point is 00:43:45 don't know about you, but I'd like to dip my brain in hand sanitizer and just sleep for a week. That's exactly what I'm gonna do. But that's what the Duponts Andrew Jackson and PT Barnum's of the world want us to do. Oh, so we're not gonna do that. Well, well, I'm gonna do that and then I won't do that, you know. We shall persevere. Why? Because if dark history has taught us anything, it's that we need to stand up, stand together, be loud. We need to go out and seek information. And if anything feels suspicious, or auspicious, we got to ask those questions. And before I go, I got to say a huge thank you to you, my friends, who have been listening
Starting point is 00:44:32 and been watching. When I first came up with the idea to take a journey through the pages of dark history, I didn't know, I honestly did not know how this was going to be received, with the love, support, and participation, and patience, all of you has really been freaking blessing. The response has been so unexpected and so beautiful and I am forever grateful. Wanting more? Join me over on my YouTube
Starting point is 00:44:55 where you can watch these episodes and all of the dark history episodes after the podcast airs and also catch my murder mystery and makeup which drops on Mondays. I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day. You make good choices and I'll be talking to you real soon. Goodbye.
Starting point is 00:45:16 Dark History is an audio boom original. This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian, Kim Jacobs, Dunia McNally from Three Arts, Justin Cummins and Claire Turner from Wheelhouse DNA, produced by Lexi Kiven, writers Jed Bookout, Joey Skavuzo and Kim Yegid, edited by Jim Lucey, shot by Tafadzwa Nemirundwe. And I'm your host, BiglySarian. Thank you, thank you. It's been real.
Starting point is 00:45:51 Thank you.

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