Every Town - Listen Now: Hysterical
Episode Date: July 22, 2024Hysterical investigates a mysterious illness that spreads among a group of high school girls in upstate New York. What is causing their sudden, often violent symptoms? Is there something in the water ...or inside the school? Or is it “all in their head?” The series examines the outbreak in LeRoy, NY, believed by some to be the most severe case of mass hysteria since the Salem Witch Trials. In his search for answers, Dan Taberski (9/12, Missing Richard Simmons, Running from Cops) explores other seemingly inexplicable events of the last few years – CIA officers being crippled with nausea and vertigo; cops OD'ing from exposure to fentanyl – and discovers they’re far more connected than we realize. From Wondery and Pineapple Street Studios, this 7-part series forces us to grapple with the mysteries of our own minds, and reckon with a contagion that we thought was long dead, but may be the defining disorder of our time. Follow Hysterical on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of Hysterical early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery+ at Wondery.fm/Hysterical_EveryTown. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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In 2011, a group of high school cheerleaders began exhibiting a bizarre mix of neurological symptoms,
ticks, twitches, and strange outbursts.
Desperate parents and school administrators looked to material factors.
Was it mold in the school buildings, a contaminated water source?
But what if the cause of the contagion wasn't coming from their physical environment at all?
In One Dree and Pineapple Street Studios' newest podcast, Hysterical,
host Dan Tiberski dives into one of the most shocking outbreaks in American history,
a medical mystery that had ripple effects well beyond the tight-knit community where it began.
As their symptoms got worse and began to spread,
the girls and their families took matters into their own hands.
Their search for answers brought a media firestorm down upon their small town,
and soon enough the entire nation was trying to solve the medical mystery
from Dr. Drewd, Aaron Brockovich.
Believe by some to be the most severe case of mass hysteria
since the Salem witch trials,
hysterical is a podcast about the desire to be believed
and what happens when the world tells you it's all in your head.
I'm about to play a clip from hysterical
and follow hysterical on the Wondry app
or wherever you get your podcast.
In December of 2011, a young woman posted a video on YouTube.
Hi, everyone.
My name's
and this is my first video.
She's got shiny red hair
with side bangs and she's wearing a white
graphic hoodie. A poster
for the metal band Avenged Sevenfold
is tacked to her bedroom wall behind her.
So I'll start off by telling you
a little bit about myself.
I'm 16. I'm an 11th grade
and I play softball
like all the time.
When she made this video, there was no TikTok.
There was very little.
in Instagram. She's not looking to monetize, not trying to influence. What this 16-year-old is
looking for is a little help. She's been having strange symptoms that so far, no one can seem to
explain. Recently, last August, I had passed out at a concert. I was head-banging. And I thought,
you know, I was just dehydrated and all that. By now, you've noticed that her speech is a bit halting,
and her nervous teenage energy is more than just fidgeting.
And about a month after, I pass out again.
The homecoming dance, that's awesome, right?
It has pattern and repetition.
Eyes twitching, hands in the air, fingers flying.
And a few days ago, my twitching has progressed into noises,
like through my nose or in my throat.
And it's something that won't go away.
The more she talks, the worse it gets.
She's neck tilting now, jerking her head.
That's another thing I do a lot.
Clap.
We're still trying to get answers, so going back to the doctors again.
Then she signs off, her first missive of many,
to wait and see what kind of response she might get.
And if anyone wants to talk about this or if anyone's starting it, I'll be willing to talk at all.
I recently Googled the phrase, i.chwich, the simplest of her symptoms, just to see.
An i twitch could be a symptom of dehydration or low electrolytes.
An i twitch could mean you have glaucoma or a disease like acanthamibah keratitis.
You don't want that one.
An i.
Which could be the first sign of a condition called Isaac syndrome, in which your muscles don't stop moving and appear to be constantly rippling under the skin even when you're asleep.
To be fair, Isaac syndrome is extremely rare.
But as those sons of bitches at the NIH are quick to point out, there are over 10,000 rare diseases.
Over 30 million Americans have been diagnosed with one.
In other words, developing a rare disease, not that rare.
And that's why it can be so scary.
when the symptoms you're experiencing all add up to a mystery.
When that teenage girl sent her video out into the void,
she wasn't sure she'd get anything back besides her own echo.
But she does.
She's about to find out there are others.
A strange illness has made at least a dozen teenage girls sick at the same high school.
And those others are all clustered in one small place and also just came down with the same bizarre symptoms.
my eighth or ninth day, straight ticking and it doesn't stop.
I would go to art class.
I used to go to two art classes every day.
Now I'm not in school.
And they are all going to discover this isn't just something they have.
It might be something they caught.
More cases of a mysterious illness have been confirmed.
Newsforce Ed Drain.
A contagion.
Caught from a friend or a classmate or from a place
by something in the water or the air or the ground there.
Famous environmentalist and activist Aaron Brockovich is getting involved.
I mean, we're looking at a myriad of environmental concerns.
This one's just standing out like a sore thumb.
And a whole town is going to start doubting their own doctors, their own neighbors.
Some will doubt their own kids.
A lot of them say that we're faking and...
And that you're faking because you want attention.
Seriously, why would we fake this?
Some will even doubt the brains inside their own heads.
Am I going crazy?
Is this really happening?
Question is, what is this?
No, no, I'm done listening to you.
You are not doing your job.
You are not doing your job.
And can they stop it from spreading?
Episode 1, Outbreak.
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