Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - Introducing: Campus Files

Episode Date: August 1, 2025

College holds a mythic place in American culture, but behind the polished campus tours and glossy brochures lies a far more complicated reality. Each episode of Campus Files uncovers a new story that ...rocked a college or university. Consider this your unofficial campus tour.  To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, Rogue Detecting Society. I wanted to let you know about a show that covers some darkly curious topics at unexpected places, specifically America's colleges and universities. Okay, maybe it's not that unexpected. Some hearts outst pounding episodes have definitely taken us into higher learning on several occasions. But campus files digs into the archives of American colleges and universities to take us behind some of the most outrageous scandals in the history of higher education. From rigged, missions to sports scandals to Greek life drama. Campus Files shares the stories you won't hear on the campus tours.
Starting point is 00:00:37 Check out this preview and be sure to listen to and follow Campus Files, an Odyssey Original podcast. Available now wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks, guys. So I am from Alabama and went to University of Alabama from 2010 to 2014. This is Abby Crane. She's a third generation University of Alabama students. Really not a whole lot went into choosing my school.
Starting point is 00:01:04 My dad went to Alabama, and my grandfather on my mom's side went to Alabama. Abby grew up watching Alabama football, which has a nearly religious following. Ask anyone at Alabama, and they'll tell you that football is one of the two dominant forces on campus, the other being Greek life. Alabama actually has the largest Greek system of any university in the country, with over 12,000 members. To put that in perspective, Alabama has more Greek members than Notre Dame has students. I want to say it's like 25 to 30 percent of the total student population, which honestly is less than you would imagine. But it's just so visible. The sorority houses are right across the street from the stadium.
Starting point is 00:01:49 The fraternity houses are the first thing you see when you drive into Tuscaloosa on campus. There are these huge antebellum-esque houses, like the visibility of them kind of shows the weight we put into it. The fraternity and sorority houses look more like mansions. Many of them have Greek columns, grand staircases, and crystal chandeliers. They cost millions of dollars to build and maintain. It's a literal manifestation of the worth we put into Greek life. Like the social currency of Greek life was a really big deal.
Starting point is 00:02:25 And I remember as a freshman, they'd be like, are you in a sorority? What sorority are you in? Like, that's immediately what they ask you. And, like, there's an assessment someone can make from which sorority you're a part of. The competition to get into one of these sororities is intense. Sorority recruitment, also known as rush, starts before freshman year even begins. I was a senior in high school and was actually going to these things called pre-rush parties, where sororities will invite you to these group parties in your hometown.
Starting point is 00:02:57 They'll memorize names before these parties. They'll have a list of attributes being like, she was homecoming queen. She was a national merit scholars. So they do know a good bit about who you are if you're coveted by the sororities. The recruitment process officially begins in early August, right at the start of the school year. Early August in Alabama is the hottest of hot. It's like 90% humidity. No amount of hairspray can tame the frizz.
Starting point is 00:03:30 dripping sweat. Rush lasts for nine days, broken up into several rounds. During the first round of Rush, freshmen visit the sorority houses, where they're greeted by sorority members chanting in the doorway. I remember showing up for my first house. Everyone stood in front of the doors. The doors flew open and they started singing a song. like yelling at us with these huge smiles and this huge hair and the head movements and the hand movements.
Starting point is 00:04:05 Everything was so coordinated and girly. Delta Gamma, I'm so happy that I am a Delta. Once inside the house, freshmen are pulled into a flurry of conversation with sorority members. Lots and lots of small talk. You're carried around through each other. having these conversations and then you're filed out one by one and they say your name as you leave. They say goodbye, Abby, goodbye Marco, whatever. Yeah, so you do that like eight times a day. It's exhausting, but you can't let it show because it's all about making a good impression.
Starting point is 00:04:48 This process is so stressful for some freshmen that they hire consultants. What is a sorority consultant, you ask? Here's one of them describing her role. I help them prepare for what they're going to be wearing for every single round, you know, just styling, like accessories, hair, makeup, nails, all that kind of good stuff. And then I also help them a conversation techniques. And, you know, it's a big deal picking out the clothes. And, like, Southern style is canonically different than the rest of the world. Big poofy sleeves, big frills, bright colors, over-exaggerated silhouettes. You know, they're made for TV.
Starting point is 00:05:28 for social media. It's not hard to see why sorority recruitment at Alabama regularly captures national attention. There's even an entire documentary about it called Bama Rush. When people are earnest and serious about something that you know nothing about, it's fun to watch. And there's drama. Girls are crying. Not everyone gets what they want. There's winners and losers.
Starting point is 00:05:56 And I think all of that makes a surprise. perfect kind of reality show of Rush. Every year, videos from Alabama Rush invariably go viral on TikTok. Rise and shine. Today's Saturday, the first day of Rush. This is my outfit for the beautiful. Today is the first round of us talking to girls. So like today is like the real deal, which is crazy. If you've watched any of these clips, you might have noticed a striking trend. In each of the thousands of videos, nearly every single woman is white. To be fair, rush videos from schools across the country are also predominantly white.
Starting point is 00:06:36 But Alabama's numbers stand out. When Abby was rushing in 2010, black women were still essentially barred from the 16 traditional Greek letter organizations. In fact, in the more than 100 years that sororities had existed at Alabama, only one identifiably black woman had ever been accepted. The only other woman was half black, but her ethnicity wasn't known until after she was admitted. I'm pretty sure I remember noticing. It was an all-white process,
Starting point is 00:07:07 but I had never learned to question that yet. I went to school at a predominantly white high school in a pretty segregated city, so that was not something I was paying attention to. That changed after Abby joined the student paper her freshman year. We had a pretty diverse group. Our editor-in-chief was black. And, you know, people were writing about race.
Starting point is 00:07:34 People were writing about disparities in the South that, you know, as a white girl, I hadn't been paying attention to until it was kind of in my face. Once she started paying attention, it was hard to miss. Throughout Abby's freshman, sophomore, and junior years, all 16-3. sororities remained entirely segregated. But then, at the start of her senior year, whispers began circulating that change might finally be on the horizon.

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