MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - A Pyrrhic Victory (PODCAST EXCLUSIVE EPISODE)
Episode Date: March 11, 2026Both of today's stories are about people who actually achieved their big career ambitions... but at an extremely high cost. You can WATCH all new & exclusive MrBallen podcast episodes on my YouTube... channel, just called "MrBallen" - https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallen If you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballen Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Both of today's stories are about people who actually achieved their big career ambitions.
But at an extremely high cost.
But before we get into today's stories,
if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious delivered in story format,
then you've come to the right place because that's all we do,
and we upload two, three, even four times every week.
So, if that's of interest to you, please replace the Follow Button's nasal spray with super glue.
Okay, let's get into our first story, which is called Proving a Purs.
Point. On the afternoon of June 10th, 1871, a defense attorney named Clement Valandingham
sat in a courtroom in Lebanon, Ohio, listening intently as a prosecutor question to witness.
And with each word that this witness said on the stand, it made the knot in Clement's stomach
get tighter and tighter. Because this testimony was very bad for Clement's client, an accused
murderer named Thomas McGeehan. So the murder that McGeehan was on trial for had happened to
about six months earlier on Christmas Eve in the nearby city of Hamilton. That night, McGeehan
had stormed into a saloon with a group of men and attacked another man named Tom Myers. And at
some point during this attack, a gun went off and Tom Myers was shot and killed. Now, there were at
least 30 witnesses in the saloon at the time. But the whole attack had happened so fast and was so chaotic
that no one had seen who did the actual shooting. Despite that, everyone in town, everyone in
immediately decided that McGeehan had done it. However, even Clement had to admit that that was a
reasonable assumption. McGeehan and the victim, Tom Myers, had a longstanding feud and everyone knew
they hated each other. Also, McGeehan was a well-known violent criminal who was said to have
killed at least four other people. So when Tom Myers got killed, the citizens of Hamilton didn't
even wait for a trial. They wanted to hang McGeehan right now. Now, the police had obviously
intervened and arrested McGeehan instead, but word had spread all over Ohio about how messy and dramatic
this case was. And as a result, the trial itself had become very high profile. Every day,
journalists and important people from all over the state came to sit in court and listen to the
testimony. And now all of these important people were watching Clement's defense case
get just obliterated by this witness. The witness was one of the men who had been in the saloon at the time
of the murder, and he was making a very big claim. He was saying that even though no one in the
saloon saw McGeehan fire the gunshot that killed Tom Myers, he must have. Because after the gun went
off, this witness saw smoke coming from McGeehan's jacket pocket, like he had been concealing his
gun inside his jacket when he had fired it. Clement looked around the courtroom while the witness
explained this and saw that everybody was nodding, like what the witness said made perfect sense.
Clement could tell basically at this point, everybody thought his client was guilty.
But Clement, he did not agree.
He knew McGeehan's case looked bad, but Clement was absolutely certain that his client really
was innocent.
Clement's theory was that the victim, Tom Myers, had shot himself by accident when he
pulled out his own gun during the fight to defend himself.
Unfortunately for Clement, though, this was 1871, so there was no forensic evidence about
gunshots, except for some scorch marks on Tom Myers' shirt. So the whole entire case was really just
based on witness testimony. And of course, this witness was very convincing for the other side.
The prosecutor finished up his questioning and then walked back to a seat with a smirk on his face,
like he knew what he had just done. They pretty much had just won the case. It was now Clement's
term with the witness, and he really didn't know how it was going to go. But as Clement stood up and
crossed the courtroom floor, he felt a calm come over him, because he was thinking,
to himself, I don't have much to lose. I mean, pretty much everybody thinks my client is guilty.
And so if he's found guilty, no one's going to be shocked. But, you know, maybe I can find a way
to prove he's innocent and that would be just great. But if I don't, it is what it is.
So to be clear, Clement was a very controversial figure in Ohio at this time, which was right
after the Civil War. He had been very vocally against the then-president Abraham Lincoln. And his
viewpoints had gotten him banished from Ohio and the other northern states. And then after the war
ended, he had returned to his home state of Ohio and had gone back to being an attorney. But he had never
really been able to fully rehabilitate his public image. Even now, six years later, a lot of people
still really hated him for behavior during the war. And so, in essence, Clement knew that pretty much
his public profile was not about to change if he lost this case. I mean, basically nothing would change. You know,
He's the guy that everybody hates and his client's the murderer. It is what it is. But if he won,
he could recreate himself in the court of public opinion as a sensational criminal defense lawyer
who overturned impossible cases. And again, he really believed his client was innocent. So this would
be like a two-pronged major victory for Clement. And so Clement stepped up to the witness box
and began firing off questions to this witness. By the end of the day, Clement
had gotten that witness to admit he hadn't actually seen a physical gun. And eventually,
Clement was able to completely destroy the jacket shooting theory when he showed the court
that the jacket that McGeehan had been wearing that night, there was no hole anywhere on it.
As the week went on and more witnesses took the stand, Clement was pleased to find that
none of them had any actual proof that McGeehan shot Tom Myers. But he also couldn't find any evidence
that proved his client was innocent either. So, later,
Later that week, on Friday, June 16th, as the trial came to a close,
Clement was kind of worried.
I mean, he knew that he had not done enough to get his client acquitted.
And even though he knew that the likelihood of success here was always going to be slim,
he felt like he had begun to make some serious headway, and they could win.
Victory felt possible.
And it was just slipping out of his hand.
That afternoon, Clement sat behind the defense table, sweating profusely as he listened to the prosecutor's team,
deliver their just brutal closing arguments.
This was giving Clement a lot of anxiety.
I mean, he was moments away from giving his own closing arguments,
and it was really his very last chance to convince the jury that his client was innocent.
But he just did not feel like the speech he had prepared would do that,
especially after, you know, the prosecutor's really just very powerful speech that he was giving right now.
And so as the prosecutor very eloquently and beautifully wrapped up his speech,
Clement was busy furiously crossing out lines on his speech and rewriting things and trying to make it better, but he just couldn't.
So he just sat there, racking his brain on what to say.
But as he was sitting there in silence and like the prosecutor has sat down and everybody's waiting for Clement to stand up and deliver his speech here,
an idea suddenly hit Clement.
It hit him so hard that he actually just dropped his pen.
He didn't know why this idea hadn't occurred to him earlier.
But he suddenly realized there was a way he could prove McGeehan was in.
It was so obvious. And if he was right, he would go down in history as probably the greatest
defense attorney Ohio had ever seen. And so Clemente lunged for his pen again, then he frantically
scribbled down what he was thinking. And then a minute later, he heard the judge call his name and
tell him, come on, it's your turn to speak. And so Clemente, he shot to his feet and he cleared
his throat. And instead of launching into the speech, he had prepared for this moment, he asked the
judge to let him do it instead on Monday. The judge was a little apprehensive, but eventually they
agreed. And when they did, Clement felt a surge of excitement rushed through his body. And after the
court proceedings officially ended for the day, Clement could not get out of there fast enough.
Clement waited until nightfall to act. He needed to run a test to make sure his theory he was going
to employ on Monday was correct. But he didn't want anybody from the prosecution team to see him doing it.
So after dinner, Clement slipped out of his hotel and into the quiet streets of Lebanon.
He'd spent the last few hours having dinner with some friends.
And while he was pretty vague about what he actually planned to do tonight,
he did tell them that they really needed to stay in town long enough to hear his big final argument on Monday.
He was so confident in what he'd uncover tonight doing this test
that he was sure his speech on Monday would be like the greatest legal moment in the history of Ohio.
And so now, as Clement made his way to the edge of town, he was filled with adrenaline and kept
increasing his speed until he was basically running. And then he finally arrived at a quiet, isolated
part of Lebanon. And as soon as he got there, he set up for this test he had planned and then ran
through it. And after he finished, Clement smiled because he knew he had just found a way to prove
that his client was innocent. Just a few minutes later, around 9 p.m. and Clement,
was back inside of his hotel room. He was so excited about the results of his test that he couldn't
even sit down. And so we just kept pacing around and around and trying to get his thoughts together,
but he was just so excited. His hotel room door was cracked open, and as he paced around,
he saw his co-counsel, who was another lawyer on the defense team, walked by. So this hotel
was sort of like the home base of everyone who was in town for the trial. And so most of the prosecution
and the defense teams were staying there. When Clement saw his co-counsel, he immediately waved
him inside and tried to tell him what he'd figured out. But the words just kind of tumbled out and all
he really got across was that the prosecution had it all wrong. But he, Clement, had figured it out.
But his co-counsel was just looking at him like he really didn't understand what he was saying.
And so at some point, Clement realized he really needed to do a physical demonstration here.
He really needed to repeat the test he had just done to show, actually show the co-counsel
exactly what he was talking about. So without a whole lot of explanation,
to his co-counsel, Clement got up, he set up the test, and then he turned and he told his
co-counsel to watch carefully, and then Clement began to perform the test. But this time,
during the test, there was a sudden explosion, and Clement collapsed to the ground. It would turn out
that Clement's test did prove, without a shadow of a doubt, that his client really was innocent.
His theory was that Tom Myers shot himself by fumbling with his own gun.
But in order to make sure his theory held weight with the jury, he wanted to show everyone
that it was definitely physically possible to do that.
So when Clement had gone to the edge of town to do this test by himself for the first time,
he took a gun with him and he basically experimented with ways it could have actually happened
by shooting the gun through fabric from different angles and looking at the resulting scorch marks.
And when he did this, he realized that the scorch marks that have been left on the victim's clothes,
the only forensic evidence they had, they could have only been made if the victim was shot at point-blank range,
which meant that McGeehan was standing too far away to be the shooter.
But it was not until later when Clement acted out the shooting again for his co-counsel
that his discovery went from great to perfect.
Because completely by accident, he did,
exactly what Tom Myers had done. He fumbled with the gun and shot himself.
Clement died from his self-inflicted wound 12 hours later. But his death made his argument so
convincing that his client was eventually acquitted. So Clement had been right. This was the
greatest case of his life. It was also his last. The next and final story of today's episode is called
gloomy Sunday. Our second and final story is about a song, but we're not going to be playing
this song during the episode. And when you get to the end of this story, you'll see why. On an
overcast, chilly Sunday in the fall of 1932, 32-year-old composer Rezo Cheresh sat in his
apartment in Paris trying to write a new melody. He'd been at it for hours, and it was not going
well at all. Each time he jotted down a new combination of notes, he'd just tear it up and toss it
into his trash bin, where there was already a pile of other discarded drafts. So Rezo was used to this
kind of messy creative process. He had made a name for himself as a musician in his home country
of Hungary over the last decade. He'd written more than 40 musical compositions for various
singers and artists, and a few had been really successful. So Rezo knew he had the talent to be a huge
star and to change people's lives with his music. But recently, you know, despite trying many
different iterations and just allowing the messy creative process to take hold and just kind of
of letting it run its course. Rezo still just could not come up with any new good work, mainly
because he was incredibly stressed out. So at this point in 1932, Rezo and many other people
were very nervous about the state of the world and their future because there were really
violent political views spreading across Europe, especially in Germany. This was still seven years
before the start of World War II, but Hitler and his Nazi party were already starting to gain power.
And Rezo, who was Jewish, was worried about all the anti-Jewish rhetoric that the Nazis were spreading.
And while that was terrifying and kept Rezo up at night, the more urgent worry he had on a daily
basis that was really impeding his creativity was how to literally afford food, because the world
was also in the middle of the Great Depression, which was a period of time in the 1920s and 30s,
when multiple countries were dealing with terrible economies and mass unemployment.
Back in Rezo's home country of Hungary, things were especially bad and getting worse.
Banks and businesses were closing almost every day,
and more than a quarter of the population was unemployed, living in extreme poverty.
Rezo had moved to Paris so he could find more opportunities.
Paris, after all, was the art mecca of Europe.
And even though the state of the world felt depressing,
Reseo thought that the creative energy there would inspire him to create something beautiful amid all the darkness.
But now, Rezo sighed and leaned back to look around the tiny, drafty, Parisian apartment of his.
He'd been here for months, and his fortunes certainly had not changed.
He still didn't have any work, and he still could not seem to write anything good.
But, you know, Rezo, he kept leaning back over and trying to write, but it was like immediately he would tear it up,
and he was just getting more and more frustrated.
until finally he just did give up and put his head in his hands and basically said,
I can't do this.
It seemed like the harder he worked and the harder he tried to ignore all the despair and sadness
and awful things going on in the world, the worse he felt and obviously the worse his work was.
Like right now, he actually almost felt physically ill from kind of bottling up all these competing
terrible feelings and thoughts.
But as he thought about the fact that he was doing that, he suddenly decided he just can't do
that anymore. He can't continue to keep that stuff in. It was at that moment that Rezo exhaled
and let in all the anguish he'd been trying to push away. Sadness and fear and quiet desperation
just washed over him and into him, and he didn't fight it anymore. He just suddenly started
writing. His pen flew across the page as wave after wave of terrible emotion hit him. And when he
was done, he ran over to his piano to play the notes that he had just written. And as his
fingers moved across the keys, a very slow, sad melody began to fill the air. And it was so beautiful
and so sad that he actually felt like crying as he heard it. When he was done playing, he just
sat back in his chair. And now tears filled his eyes and his heart was pounding so fast that
he knew he needed to get some air faster. He might actually just pass out. And so Rezzo went outside to
take a walk and hoped the fresh air would help him snap out of the wild emotional fog that had just come over
him. But the pair of streets were gray and cold, and this new melody continued to ring in his ears.
He was thrilled that he'd actually written something, something real and powerful for the first time in what felt like a long time.
But it was such an intense expression of his own sadness that it almost hurt.
Shortly into his walk, he heard somebody call his name.
When he looked up, he saw it was his good friend, a poet named Laslo Yavor, who rushed right up to him.
And right away, when Rezo saw his friend, he felt himself lightening up a little bit.
He liked Laslo. They were both Hungarians in Paris trying to make good art and a name for themselves,
but neither of them had really done it yet. But as soon as Laslo reached Rezzo, Rezo could tell that
his friend seemed really upset about something too. And his friend told him that his fiancé
had just ended things with him and he was completely heartbroken. After Rezo said that he was
terribly sorry, the men just walked together in silence. They were both lost in their own sad,
heavy feelings, and neither of them could think of anything to say. And without even meaning to,
Rezo just began whistling the song that he had just written. And when he did this, it was like the
tune had an immediate effect on Laslo. His eyes welled up and he sort of began to cry and also
he began to sing along using words from a very sad poem that he had recently written. Rezo couldn't
believe it. Because without even trying, Laslo's words were perfectly fit for his melody.
And so as this sort of impromptu collaboration has begun, the men went from this really dark, gloomy mood to a purely excited one.
They were so inspired that they rushed into a nearby restaurant to sit and work out the rest of the song.
And before they knew it, Rezzo had written an entire composition with Laslo's lyrics.
And the song was about someone whose lover had just died and their desire to be reunited with them.
When the men finished, they wanted to hear their song out loud.
So they asked the restaurant's resident musicians to play it.
And pretty soon, their song, something that hadn't even existed a few hours ago,
was blaring around the crowded restaurant.
And as far as Rezo and Laslo could tell, everybody inside was loving this song.
Some of the restaurant patrons actually cried,
and others closed their eyes and just kind of swayed to the sound.
It was what Rezo had always hoped his music would do,
which was truly affect those who heard it.
Rezo and Laslo looked at each other.
and for the first time in days, they smiled.
Rezzo and Laslo decided to call their song Gloomy Sunday,
since it had been created on that hazy fall Sunday.
They both had a feeling that this tune was very special
and that it would finally be the thing that changed both of their lives.
So over the next few months, they took the song around to producers
and tried to get somebody to buy it.
And finally, someone did.
A company agreed to publish the sheet music and record it.
After that, Rezo went back to his shabby Parisian apartment,
and waited for the song to take hold and the money to start pouring in.
But that's not what happened.
As the months passed by, Rezo didn't hear gloomy Sunday on the radio
or see it on any charts or hear it in restaurants or performed in theaters.
It was like it really had never existed at all.
And this crushed Rezzo.
He was even more upset and defeated than he had been before he had written it
because he'd gotten a taste of hope.
And it felt even worse to fail after that.
The rest of Rezo's life,
and the state of the world got worse, too. The Great Depression was still going strong,
and as Hitler got more and more popular, people started to wonder if there was going to be a war.
So Rezo and pretty much everyone else around him just sank further into their fears and worries
and kept praying for something to change. Three years later, on a spring evening in 1935,
Rezo was back in Hungary, walking down a street in the country's capital city, Budapest.
He was on his way to a friend's house, but,
As he strode down the sidewalk, he heard a song coming from an open window.
He stopped cold and his heart began to pound because he knew that song.
It was his.
It was gloomy Sunday.
Rezo had no idea how or why he was hearing his song, which as far as he knew, no one had really
been that interested in.
But it was completely shocking.
I mean, someone he didn't know was listening to his song on the radio.
That meant it was being put out on the airwaves and being consumed by the public.
This was incredible.
And so Rezo just stood there.
there, letting his own notes wash over him for the first time, you know, hearing this out in public.
And then when it was done, he just stood there and just absolutely beamed.
And after that, for months, gloomy Sunday was everywhere.
Rezzo heard it played at social gatherings, streaming from people's windows, street performers
sang it to passerby, and it was even performed at concert venues all over the city.
And so by the end of the year, it seemed like there was hardly anyone in Hungary who hadn't heard
and loved his song. Rezo even read in the papers that his song was being played in England,
in France, and as far away as the United States. So Rezo knew that he had actually done it.
He had realized his dream of being a successful, internationally recognized composer
with a hit song that truly resonated with the public. A few months later, on a morning and
late February of 1936, Rezo left his apartment and was heading out for the day. And on his way down
the street, he passed by a newsstand. And he noticed that one of the headlines mentioned his song,
Gloomy Sunday. Initially, he was really excited to see that he was getting some press. So he immediately
grabbed a copy and opened it up to read. But as his eyes scammed the page, his stomach flipped
because this was not good press. Actually, what this article had to say was so terrible
that Rezzo's first reaction was that he'd read it wrong. And so he read it again and again and again,
But each time he read it, it just said the same horrible thing.
And so Rezo found himself starting to panic.
Rezo quickly shut the paper and just began looking around him.
And he saw there were a few other people who were also by the newsstand,
and they were reading the same paper.
And they were all talking to one another and hushed voices
and pointing at that headline about his song.
And Rezo just stood there, listening to this unsettling murmur
and feeling a wave of absolute horror wash over him.
Over the next month, more and more headlines about Rezo's song continued to appear in the papers,
and it was like each day they only got worse.
And then the story went international.
I mean, the Catholic Church weighed in on it, and then the police got involved.
Finally, one afternoon at the end of March in 1936, Rezo was sitting at his piano, staring down at the keys.
He knew he should be writing music, but instead he was just filled with dread,
just like he had been every day since he first read.
that dreadful headline, and then suddenly there was a knock at the door. And when Rezo got up
and answered it, a cold sweat broke out all over his body because it was the Budapest police,
and they wanted him to come down to the station. Rezo's pulse raced with nerves, but at this point,
he wasn't surprised, because by now he knew that writing Gloomy Sunday had been a horrific mistake.
because it would turn out, Bloomy Sunday had been a very shockingly impactful song,
just as Rezo thought he wanted it to be.
But over the course of the last year,
the police had begun finding its sheet music or its written lyrics
or the actual song playing on record players at scenes of suicides.
Dozens of people across Hungary, Europe, and the United States,
from police officers to teenagers to wait staff to students,
had taken their own lives, basically while listening to Gloomy Sunday.
These deaths were so widespread that a Hungarian archbishop actually wrote a letter to the general
public begging them to stop hurting themselves. And multiple bands of the song itself were enacted
across Europe and England and the United States. On the day that the Budapest police knocked on
Rezo's door, they demanded that he stop sales of the song. And Rezo agreed. And eventually,
So did the song's publisher and his musical partner, Laslo.
And Rezo's partner, Laslo, was especially grief-stricken by this whole thing.
Because his fiance, the one who had broken his heart on the day he had written this song with Rezo,
she ended up being one of the many suicide victims.
Before she took her own life, she sent Laslo a telegram, which simply said, gloomy Sunday.
No one knows why gloomy Sunday potentially caused the sudden wave of death.
One theory is that people were already really suffering from depression and feeling hopeless
because of the Great Depression and the worsening political climate,
and the song's popularity was either a coincidence or sort of an unfortunate trigger.
As for Rezo, he was devastated by the legacy of his song,
even though it did technically live up to his original vision.
It did deeply resonate with people and was unquestionably a hit.
And over the years, despite all the negative associations,
with the song, it's been translated into 28 different languages and was even performed by
legendary singers like Frank Sinatra and Billy Holiday. Initially, there was an estimated 20 suicides
attributed to Gloomy Sunday across Europe and the United States. In the years that have followed,
however, lore around the song has only grown, and some estimates put the death toll in the hundreds,
although the numbers are difficult to verify. Rezo never wrote another hit, and in fact, ultimately
he followed in the footsteps of some of his listeners.
He jumped out the window of his eighth floor apartment on another overcast gloomy Sunday
and died two days later.
Before I wrap this episode up, I want to say that if you are experiencing suicidal thoughts
or suicidal ideations or you're just struggling right now, number one, you're not alone,
but number two, you really need to talk to someone.
Don't hold that stuff in.
A quick note about our stories.
they are all based on true events, but we sometimes use pseudonyms to protect the people involved,
and some details are fictionalized for dramatic purposes.
The Mr. Ballin podcast, Strange, Dark and Mysterious Stories, is hosted and executive produced by me,
Mr. Ballin. Our head of writing is Evan Allen, our head of production is Zach Levitt,
produced by Jeremy Bone, story editing by Evan Allen, research and fact-checking by
Shelly Shew, Samantha Van Hoose, Evan Beamer, Abigail Shumway, and Camille Callahan.
Research and fact-checking supervision by Stephen Ear.
Audio editing and post-produced by Whit Lacassio and Cole Lacassio,
Perry Crowell and Jordan Stidham.
Mixed and mastered by Brendan Cain.
Production Coordination by Samantha Collins.
Production support by Antonio Manada and Delana Corley.
Artwork by Jessica Clogston Kiner.
Theme song called Something Wicked by Ross Bugden.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin podcast.
And just a reminder, every new and exclusive episode we put out,
out on the Mr. Ballin podcast, you can also now watch on the Mr. Ballin YouTube channel that
very same day. And trust me, some of these stories you truly have to see to believe.
Again, my YouTube channel is just called Mr. Ballin.
If you want to listen to episodes one week early and ad free, you can subscribe to SiriusXM
Podcast Plus on Apple Podcasts or visit seriousxm.com slash podcast plus to listen with Spotify
or another app of your choice.
So that's going to do it.
appreciate your support. Until next time, see ya.
