Ologies with Alie Ward - Demonology (EVIL SPIRITS) with Alyssa Beall
Episode Date: October 23, 2019Demons, spooky spirits, devils, fallen angles, hungry ghosts: every culture has them. And West Virginia University Religious Studies professor, demonologist and history buff Dr. Alyssa Beall runs down... how humans have used myths and stories to explain the feelings that make our hairs stand up and our stomaches sink. Is possession a mental illness? Are demons pranksters from hell? Is your baby evil or just cranky? And why do we like to be scared and poke at the line between life and death? Also: demon dongs. Oh wow.Follow Dr. Alyssa Beall at Instagram.com/religiontravelerOctober 25th free "Science under the Stars" event with Alie and Sarah McAnulty: 6-9pm, Silverlake Meadow, Los Angeles. Bring a picnic blanket and pee before you get there. Donations went to DoctorswithoutBorders.org and PlannedParenthood.orgSponsor links: periodbetter.com, code OLOGIES; BetterHelp.com/ologies; KiwiCo.com/ologies; LinkedIn.com/ologiesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a month: www.Patreon.com/ologiesOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, pins, totes and STIIIICKERS!Follow twitter.com/ologies or instagram.com/ologiesFollow twitter.com/AlieWard or instagram.com/AlieWardSound editing by Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam Media & Steven Ray MorrisTheme song by Nick ThorburnSupport the show: http://Patreon.com/ologies
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh hey, it's that guy who asked to pet your dog but doesn't realize how much you want
to talk to him about your dog's likes and dislikes and hopes and dreams.
Alleyward, back with another spooky episode of Allergies.
So I've been dishing up a whole month of darkish, pumpkin-y topics and if you've missed
out this October, y'all there are episodes on skeletons, we talk about body farms, we
got one on spiderwebs, one on pumpkins that will warm your whole heart and now this one
is just right on the nose, demons, evil spirits, creepy, mean beings.
Let's get into it.
But before we do, a few business items up top, number one, if you're in LA and you're
hearing this before Friday, October 25th, come hang out in a park and learn about squids
with me and Sarah McAnulty, who is our squid expert-toothologist.
So we're like meadow, 6.30pm, Friday, October 25th, free, we're just going to be hanging
out in a park talking about science.
There's an event bright link in the show notes with more info.
Also happy birthday to FancyNancy, aka my mom, who taught you how to fall asleep better.
We all love you FancyNancy.
Also thank you to everyone supporting the podcast on patreon.com slash olergies and
submitting your questions.
Thank you to everyone wearing olergies merch and tagging your photos with olergies merch.
Thanks to everyone making sure that you're subscribed and rating the podcast and telling
friends and of course the folks leaving reviews, you know that I read them so that I can pick
a freshie every week, such as, for example, Eggsy1089, who says crushed Nana's dinner
convo, says today I wowed my fam with so much spiderweb knowledge and pitched the podcast
so hard, I told them they can all expect olergies merch for Christmas.
Thank you for inspiring me to slow my life down and take genuine interest in things I
never thought I would.
This podcast is pure gold.
Eggsy1089, thank you, thank your Nana for me.
Let's descend into the bowels of human culture and consciousness around the darkest corners
of fear and trickery and delve into demons, which comes by the way from a root meaning
a lesser spirit, which comes from an earlier root meaning to divide and yes, demonology
is a thing.
So this olergist and I agreed to meet remotely at an ungodly hour of 7am.
We hopped on the phone, we each recorded our audio so the sound might be just a wee bit
different than usual, just attributed to a demon.
It's fine.
So this olergist got a bachelor's in religious studies, a master's in theology and religion
and a PhD in religion with a thesis about the neo-pagan internet community and is now
an assistant professor in religious studies at West Virginia University.
She teaches courses on the history of witches and demon hunts and fear and historical heresy.
So we hopped on the phone, we gabbed about ghosts and gargoyles and possessions and myths
and horror films and psychology and Halloween costumes and cross-cultural spookiness and
dear old demons and devils.
So light a candle and watch your back for the historical wisdom of religious studies
professor and demonologist Dr. Alyssa Beale.
So you are a demonologist.
Yes, I guess sort of.
I study people who study demons.
How's that?
I don't study the demons themselves.
I think it explains why it's hard to find an actual demonologist who is perhaps incredible
in their field.
Right.
I think.
Like a practicing demonologist might be difficult.
Yeah, yeah.
There's like one out there and her Twitter account was suspended for unknown reasons and
I was like, oh dear.
There's a lot of them.
No.
But how long have you studied people who study demons?
About 20 years now, I guess.
It started when I was in grad school.
I got very interested in just concept of magic and witchcraft.
Historically, a lot of Inquisition era stuff and it sort of went from there.
I started teaching a class on magic and witchcraft, which people also thought was sort of a practicum.
They thought they were going to learn spells.
They were very disappointed when they found that they weren't.
So yeah, about 20 years back at Syracuse, I started studying it.
What got you into it before it became academic?
Like what kind of a kid were you?
Oh, crazy.
Absolutely.
I tell a story all the time.
One of my friends remembers this.
I got in trouble on the playground because I told some of the other kids in grade school
that I was talking to Athena and I wasn't, I wasn't, let's make that clear, but I was
pretending that I was and they got a little nervous about that.
So Alyssa's parents were avid travelers and she developed an appetite for world history
and religion pretty early.
So while your thing as a kid may have been like micro-machines or hopping a skip it in
the driveway, Dr. Beale's thing was ancient Greece and apparently her school administrators
did not appreciate her tall tales about talking to ancient deities.
So what happened when you got called into the principal's office for this?
I think at first they were just trying to make sure that I didn't need medical advice.
Yeah.
But they just basically told me to stop scaring the other kids and stop telling them that
I was having conversations with ancient gods.
So I did.
Fine.
What did your parents think of it?
Were they like, she's our kid?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
They weren't terribly upset about it.
They thought it was pretty funny actually at the time.
So yeah.
I was the kid who started playing D&D when she was like 10 or so.
So that gives you some idea of my personality as a child, I think, yeah.
So when it came to getting on an academic path, did you realize that you could do this
as a job or what was your first intro into it academically?
Oh gosh.
I would say I had no idea of what I was going to do.
I actually started out in polycyan journalism.
That was what I was going to college for.
And I ended up taking a really horrible anthropology class on magic and I just sort of fell in
love with the topic and it was just one of those things where you find something out
of the blue that you really, really enjoy and it sort of brings together all of the
different things that you love.
So I, yeah, had no clue I would end up here.
What exactly is a demon versus like a goblin versus bat?
Juju, like how do you even define?
If you go all the way back, like into ancient Greece, they are not necessarily evil.
You might just think of them more like they're not spirits because they have form, but they're
not necessarily evil creatures.
So have you ever read The Golden Compass?
No.
Oh, okay.
It's this great fiction, great book.
Sorry about the kid's book, but it's a little bit higher end than that.
But it's about demons.
It's about demons, yes.
And they're good for their people.
They're sort of attached to people and they're very, very good creatures as long as the people
are good.
And demons are originally kind of like that, but when you get into monotheism, all of those
kinds of creatures get turned into bad things.
So how far back do you think the notion of a spirit who was like mischievous, who had
form?
How far back does that go?
What are the first instances of that in writing or in drawing?
Wow, that's a big question.
Yeah, sorry.
Yeah, no.
I'm sort of flipping through things in my head.
Definitely ancient Greece.
And I would think in some forms ancient Egypt as well.
So that's about as far back as we can really get in some ways, textually at least.
So even before written history, demon idols were in effect, y'all.
Like they found an 11,000 year old mouth, a cape, human face carved in a plank of wood.
A few gold prospectors discovered it in a Siberian peat bog.
They thought it was a lot younger than it was, didn't really realize what a big deal
it was, and that it was worth more than its weight in the gold they were looking for.
Oops, that's just a demon screwing with your values.
So what kind of demons are we talking about in ancient myths?
You may have heard of Hades, for example.
Now how cute is it that the underworld was just called Hades after the guy whose house
it was?
Like maybe once he had a cute neon bar sign that said, Shae Hades, but the top half shorted
out and no one ever bothered to fix it.
So they just called it Hades.
Hades Place.
P.S. Hades wasn't a purely evil figure though.
Just kind of a dickish stepdad that no one liked.
But Alyssa explains that those kind of demons aren't gods and they're not sequestered in
hell.
Logical demons were a whole separate bag and they were considered to be up here among us.
Just kicking it anywhere.
And as a person whose shoe fell behind the X-ray machine at TSA this morning, so she
just left it and ran in socks to her gate through LAX as her plane was boarding.
Hot damn.
I'm starting to believe in demons.
No, I mean, I think it's more of an idea of beings in the normal world that are not
quite gods and goddesses.
So some kind of, I have air quotes going on here, spiritual beings, just sort of creatures
in the normal world.
But they're not a person either.
Right.
And they have some kinds of powers.
Why do you think that as human beings we need to come up with stories to explain good and
evil?
Do you think that demons are essentially just a product of trying to understand that we're
shitty people or understand like Freudian super ego or an ego?
I think they vary depending on sort of where you're at and obviously the time period as
well.
So demons today, yeah, they're probably, oh gosh, manifestations of our issues and that
kind of thing.
So we try to create these figures that embody the things that we're scared of.
Dying alone.
But since they're not always evil, historically, that question is sort of up in the air.
It's really, I guess they could be manifestations of what people were afraid of or what people
wanted or desired, but it's hard to tell because people in the past don't really talk about
things like that.
So it's our best guess in many ways why a lot of societies seem to create these things.
And still today, not all of them are bad.
So if you go over to, for example, Thailand, they have these absolutely gorgeous what we
would think of as demons.
They have scary faces and they're very mean looking, but they're actually creatures that
protect temples.
Okay, side note, I look this up and I believe she's talking about yaksha, which are nature
spirits with demon faces.
They kind of look like if a professional wrestler and a dragon had a love baby who dressed up
as a circus clown for Halloween, like fierce, snarling, just exploding with bright colors
and makeup, but also bearing kind of surprise expressions like, holy shit, what are you
doing here?
That's kind of what their faces look like.
So yaksha can be beautiful, though, and they can guard or they can haunt places.
So they might protect you or they might devour you.
So I guess be nice to them.
And I want them to know that the wrestler clown baby thing was like very much a compliment.
They're not bad, but they look like it.
And can you walk me through?
I know this is essentially distilling all of your work into like five or 10 minutes.
Just a tiptoe through the tulips of demons, like what are some of your favorites in history?
When did they rise and fall in popularity?
My period is so sort of medieval.
I guess those are kind of my favorite.
The medieval demons are so classically what we would think of as demons, right?
They've got big horns and they're all muscly.
And a lot of times they've got like six penises and that kind of stuff.
So they're just so classically demonic that you really have to love them.
Yeah, six.
But I also do I have a kind of affinity for the ones that I was just talking about in
Thailand, because again, they're so over the top and they are really, really beautiful.
So I'm sort of equally drawn to the super, super scary ones in medieval theology and
the really, really pretty ones in sort of Thai religion as well.
OK, so quick aside, demons like people and lamps and probably but plugs come in all shapes
and sizes. Now, they might not be called demons, though.
Us human persons, we got a lot of names for them, like pre Babylonians called them Shadu
and in Islamic folklore, they're called Jins or ifrit or shayaten.
And the Japanese have these ogre, only Jewish mythologies got Shedim.
Christianity has demons, fallen angels called Nephilim.
Russian has shorts.
And in Algonquin, there's this tall, antlered, blood hungry spirit called a windigo.
So you got a culture, you got demons.
Now, what about demons with the A.E.
Demons can be nice or they can be the name of a computer program.
That's just a little techie factoid for you.
Now, what about Damien?
Does that name mean that you're evil?
Nope. The name Damien means to tame or to subdue.
Also, for a little context, what was the Inquisition you inquire?
Well, there were a few Inquisition periods, one in the mid 1200s, and they used to torture
people to try to find out who was talking shit about the Pope.
Or later, in the 1500s, everyone was poking everyone else to see who was a demon or a
witch to combat the rise of Protestantism.
So a lot of side-eye and suspicion in those days.
And now, historically, was the Inquisition period, was that like the hot time for demons?
Did demons have a kind of a boom then?
In the end period of it, it doesn't start out that way.
That's what's sort of interesting.
To sort of summarize it briefly, it seems more like at first, you're not supposed to
believe in them.
As a practicing Christian at the time, it sort of goes against the power of God to
believe that demons have power.
And the same thing with witches, you're really not supposed to believe that witches
are real in the beginning of the Inquisition.
And then as it develops, it seems like they're almost trying to prove that
God is real.
It's this sort of period of skepticism that everybody starts getting very nervous
about proving whether or not God exists.
Yeah.
And to do that, they have to sort of prove the supernatural.
So they end up trying to prove that demons exist.
So yeah.
So if demons exist, then God exists and everything's OK.
We're all good here.
So that is not what I expected at all.
Yeah.
It's fascinating to see.
It really is how it develops, because when the Inquisition period starts, they're
not going after witches.
They're really going after what they would call heretics, people who believe
differently from them.
And it evolves into this whole actual witch hunt, but it doesn't start out that way.
So demons come in relatively sort of late on the scene, so to speak.
And when in terms of a timeline, when did monotheism really take
root? When did we, as a culture, when did certain cultures take on this idea
that demons were the enemy of the one true God?
Probably around the time that Christianity really gains a hold in Rome.
So, you know, around the 300s.
OK, quick, virtual field trip.
Alyssa told me that underneath the Vatican, there's a huge necropolis where
they used to store a whole army of dead people.
And there's a stucco painting of Lucifer down there under
the Vatican. Lucifer, of course, draws his name from a Bringer of Light or
the Son of Morning, named after a star falling from heaven because Satan's
origin story was that of an angel who rebelled and turned into that friend
who's always trying to get you to have another drink or order the chili
cheese fries or just delighting in the misery of others.
So it really is around, it starts developing, I would guess, early on
like 100, 200 when they're trying to sort of beat, you know, they're trying
to sort of win the battle of whose religion is going to take over this
particular area. And so they really turn against the representations
of those earlier gods and goddesses.
And so in order to prove their faith to one God in the sky, it's like all
these other jabronis, we don't believe in them anymore.
That's yesterday's news.
Or they have to be bad.
So instead of them being powerful and possibly good, they can sort of be
powerful, but they have to be less powerful than God.
So then you get this whole demonic world.
And what properties does a demon usually have?
What kind of mischief are we talking?
Do they like, do they give you cancer or do they just drop something in
your food that sucks?
You know what I mean?
Like, how bad are we talking?
I guess it could be that bad.
Yeah, they could cause illness.
That's for sure.
Okay.
There's one story that I read in one text that was something as simple as
this priest blamed a demon for tripping him as he fell down the stairs.
And that was his proof that he had tripped and fallen down the stairs.
And that was proof of demonic activity.
So it can be anything from really, really horrible, like killing babies.
The devil did it.
You know, making them into stews.
That's really popular during the medieval period.
Or it can be something, something as simple as tripping and falling down the
stairs so that they can have a lot of power, but they also can do really,
really stupid stuff.
So a few things a demon might do to you.
Sign your name on an insulting letter to someone you respect.
Perhaps deposit their own giant bowel movement in your cat's litter box,
causing you to take your pet to the veterinarian.
Maybe affix a fuck cops sticker to your car's bumper.
Just kidding.
That's not the work of a demon.
All three of those are just things that notorious prankster and low-key
comedic maniac George Clooney has done to his friends.
They weren't necessarily accusing the people of being demonic.
They were accusing them of having interactions with demons.
And that's where witches were supposed to get their power from.
I'm doing one now that I can't tell you about.
But in a year, you're going to hear that I've been arrested.
So witches were not powerful in and of themselves.
They were powerful through the help of a demon.
They often can't even be seen, the demons.
So the priests are trying to prove that they exist through the witches.
You know what they say, behind every great witch is a supportive, inspiring demon.
And do you think that there was, you know, back then there were a lot of
kind of fables and demons that were made up to explain science that they just didn't get?
Yeah, like even things like crops failing, the harvest doesn't come in right.
So you have to blame something.
I think that's definitely an aspect of it, sure.
Or again, like I just said, with the whole connection to babies.
Obviously, there were a lot of really early infant deaths during the medieval period.
And so people wanted to blame something for that happening.
It's better than not knowing what's going on, or it's better than thinking
that you did something wrong, right?
So I do think in a lot of ways, it was manifestations of people's fears.
You can take them, use it yourself to blame those those bad creatures
for the bad stuff that's going on.
Do you think that still happens today?
Yeah, definitely.
Yes, yes, it seems that we create these sorts of things.
Sure, even if it's in pop culture, which is a lot of what I also study.
I'm really into horror movies, even though I'm terrified of horror movies, too.
It takes me forever to get up the nerve to watch one, but I love them.
So I think we we still create these sorts of things in order to express those fears.
Even today in the US, we sort of turn towards certain types of creatures
when we're afraid of certain things.
So we sort of get, you know, vampires are popular for like five years.
And then zombies are popular for five years.
And then we switch over to witches for a while.
And they all are expressions of different things that we're scared of, I think.
Are they all a type of demon?
Like when it comes to defining a demon, are there parameters
in terms of what's a demon and what's not?
I mean, we would think of them today very differently.
So I assume that if somebody was going to define demonic activity,
especially if you're within the church, it would have to have something to do
with the figure of Satan, I would think.
So it's not any more just some kind of evil creature with the influx of Christianity.
We really do have to have that kind of opposition to the one true God.
If you think about things like exorcism movies,
they definitely have to be able today to take control of a person.
There's that whole possession aspect to it.
And I would think that today that would be one of the main
sort of markers of what is demonic and what's not.
Possession is nine tenths of the law, Pierce.
So we've got things like ghosts and witches and that sort of stuff,
still in popular culture.
But the demonic is something that can like literally take over your body
and not give it back.
I think that's what people are so scared of.
It was an excellent day for an exorcism.
Did you ever watch The Exorcist as a child or as an adult?
Yeah. Oh, yes.
Why is that the scariest movie?
Like, why is that in the Omen?
Like, why are those so terrifying?
God, the Omen scared me even more, actually.
Yeah, yeah, I it still does.
It's still the exorcist isn't so scary when I show it to students now,
though I showed them exorcism of Emily Rose the other day.
And a lot of them were really freaked out by that one.
And I am losing the devil in the flesh.
I do think that even if people aren't scared by other stuff,
possession in particular still scares people a lot.
So I can talk through with my students and we do.
We talk about all of these things that people have feared in the past
because at some point, vampires were considered to be absolutely real
and people were really, really scared of them.
Side note, also scary.
The plague, just infectious flea bites and wet coughs
killed up to 200 million people in the mid 1300s.
And what happens when everyone is dying and barfing blood
and has bleeding mouth source?
Folks start thinking, well, shit, vampires are real.
What is a bacteria?
Never heard of it, but vampires, that's just science.
Now that sounds silly to most people,
whereas you show them the exorcist and they're really freaked out.
So I think it's that idea of loss of control of the body,
loss of control of your mental facilities.
All of that stuff is terrifying to people.
What? How do you feel when you see
like news items about current day exorcisms?
How do you process that in terms of your
your skeptical brain and your science brain and your historical brain?
Yeah, I guess for me,
anytime I'm studying religion, I do sort of go into this dual mode, right?
So I'm very much a skeptic and I'm very much into science.
I mean, my brothers and aeronautics and aerospace and, you know,
it's my family is really scientific and not religious at all.
But I'm really interested in why these things come up in religions too.
So, you know, whereas my scientific brain is saying that can't possibly happen,
my other side of my brain is saying, well, let's see what it looks like.
So I'm really interested when I hear those types of things.
And obviously all over the world, whether it's a monotheistic culture or not,
you get these concepts of possession.
Sometimes they're good like in voodoo possession is often a really positive thing
because it's a way of communicating with the spirit world.
So I'm interested in how that gets carried out in a culture.
So why being possessed might be good for somebody.
But in our culture, it's seen as the absolute worst thing that could possibly happen,
at least in a Christian context.
I wonder too, how Christianity regards getting possessed by a good spirit.
Like Christianity seems OK with getting knocked up by God.
Right, exactly.
But at the same time, like demon, how dare you make me dance around and speak in gibberish?
Except when people speak in tongues, that's OK.
So the whole descent of the Holy Spirit and Pentecostal Christian traditions,
it is the influx of the Holy Spirit and it can make you do things that you don't usually do.
So in some cases, in some some denominations of Christianity,
it's a positive thing to speak in tongues.
Speaking in tongues, what great kids.
Then it's sort of the flip side of demonic possession
that can make you speak languages that you don't know.
Then I think that's still one of the proofs of possession is that you speak
in a language that you have never learned.
So it can go either way, even in Christianity.
I looked into this and it's true.
Some folks put a lot of pressure on themselves to speak in tongues.
There was one ministry's website I read.
I found an article that said, quote, I felt like it was my fault
that I was doing something wrong, that something in me was broken.
Finally, I just shut myself in my room and said,
I'm not leaving this room until I speak in tongues.
I'm not letting one word of English leave my mouth.
And I think that was my breakthrough.
So Rosetta Stone can't help you here, friends.
Have you ever looked into those studies and tried to figure out, OK,
were these people just speaking gibberish or did they all of a sudden
were they fluent in Portuguese and no one can explain it?
You get the stories that, yeah, it's fluency and stuff like Latin
or ancient Greek or something like that.
Most people never are even exposed to.
But, you know, again, the skeptical side of me says, well, who's telling a story?
You know, what what do they have to gain by having this out there?
Two sides of the coin, right?
Does it actually happen?
Or is there a compelling reason for somebody to be sharing this sort of story?
And I don't know if I've ever seen
scientifically convincing evidence of somebody talking a language
that they have not learned.
Why do you think we need to be scared, especially like we're coming up on Halloween here?
Why do we descend into like a month of like, let's be terrified,
like goblins, ghosts, spooks, spiders, like why do we need that?
It's really an outlet, isn't it?
I mean, this is the same reason that I watch horror movies,
even though I get totally scared and I hate the feeling.
And I'm one of those people that actually watches it from behind my fingers.
Half the time. Yeah. Oh, God, me too. Yeah.
So I don't know when I'm done watching a horror movie.
Have I had some sort of emotional release or something?
Maybe then again, often I can't go to sleep the night that I watch a horror movie either.
So that's kind of silly.
But I think it is.
It's it's some kind of emotional feeling that we get out of it that we really want.
So we want to be terrified because in some ways it actually feels good, I guess.
And it actually, I think it also engages a part of our brain that we might turn off a lot.
So as I've been saying, this whole thing about me being skeptical and I don't believe in ghosts.
But at the same time, then why do I get absolutely terrified
when I watch something like Haunting of Hill House?
I, you know, I I do, I get really, really scared.
But if I don't believe in ghosts, why am I getting that scared when I watch it?
It doesn't actually make sense.
So I think it just it gives us some kind of emotional release that we might be looking for.
There's more on this in the Fierology episode.
But most experts echo that scary entertainment and horror hijacks
are fight or flight response and pokes at our screaming almond of terror,
the amygdala, which is deep in the brain.
So the rush of adrenaline that we would be using to run away
from a bloodthirsty moose or a demon in a nightgown instead
gives some people an opioid like rush.
And then everything that goes bump in the night is kind of a little bump of brain chemicals.
When you're working, are you pouring over old manuscripts?
Like what kinds of writing are you looking at?
And do you ever get freaked out while you're studying?
I do actually get a little bit freaked out by that.
I just was writing on Haunting of Hill House
and I had to watch the whole series again on Netflix.
And I had to do it like during the day while my husband was home with all the lights on.
So that stuff still does freak me out.
The ancient texts and the woodcuttings,
they're they're really interesting and they're really elaborate,
especially when you get into depictions of demons and things like that.
So it's fascinating to see what the medieval brain was coming up with.
Well, what was her thing with goats?
Why? Why goats and demons?
Why is there such a crossover stylistically?
I think it's the horns.
I think it goes back again to Pan in ancient Greece,
the sort of depiction of the half human, half goat, or at least the horned beings.
I do think that comes in from a lot of the ancient Greco-Roman stuff again.
There was just an exhibit that we saw.
We were in study abroad with students last summer
and we took them to it was in the Israel Museum
and they were doing an exhibit on Peter Pan, which sounds strange, maybe.
But they were actually tracing it all the way back to the ancient Greco-Roman God Pan
and then how that came forward.
So all of these fairy tales and all of these depictions
have their roots in that mythology still.
So we're constantly reusing the Greeks as everybody has for thousands of years.
So now we're using them for these depictions of demons still,
using their gods and goddesses.
So for more on this, see the mythology episode with John Boucher.
It's just chock full of gossip about gods.
And what about how demonology is used
in a way to alienate different groups of people, different religions?
How has that been in the past and how does that continue now?
Oh, gosh, you mean like accusing people of literal?
I mean, sometimes it's actually accusing people of having sex with them.
That's one of the major things that the inquisitors do.
Is that really? Oh, yeah.
They're why I'm in with six dick.
Yeah, it's not supposed to be fun, right?
The inquisitors, the stuff that they write, it's very, very detailed,
which is one of the interesting things.
It's porn. It's demon porn.
It is, actually.
And they talk a lot about demon penises.
It's a fascination with the inquisitors.
So, you know, it's supposed to be often, as I said, lots of lots of dicks.
So many.
But also like spiked.
Yeah. So not like barbed.
Yeah. Yeah. Ouch.
Demons, not only horned, but also horned.
I asked Alyssa about horns and the intersection of religious fear and anti-semitism.
Moses is famously depicted by Michelangelo's having horns.
So what in the fiery depths of Shea Hades hell is that all about?
And the whole Moses thing, Moses being depicted with horns, particularly.
All of that, it's so weird how this happens.
That in particular is mistranslation of words.
So I think it's when.
What does it say about Moses?
It's that he's got rays of light coming out of his head in one particular biblical verse
and somewhere I think it might be King James Version.
I'm not sure when it gets translated.
That gets translated into horns coming out of his head.
Yeah. Oh, boy.
So you do get a lot of those overlaps,
but usually it's down to some horribly mistranslated something or another
that people then run with. Oh, God.
Yeah, that is awful.
It is one job, right?
No one was proofing that.
No, I know, right?
It happens over and over again.
Oh, man. So anyone who has like a religious based
political leanings, who knows,
he might be working from like a smeared manuscript.
Oh, exactly. Yes.
Yes. Yeah, that's terrifying.
It is one thing about how boring it must have been to be like recopying all of these texts.
So the people who had to do that,
sometimes I wonder if they really just decided to screw around with stuff
because they were bored, bored, horny monks.
Yeah, exactly.
Who's the demon now, bitches?
And you see this mistranslated something.
Exactly. It will persist for eons.
And they make all these little drawings
in the margins that are really crazy.
So I think a lot of it maybe came in from, yeah, just bored, medieval monks.
Also, I wondered if some of those celibate religious folks ever wish
they could just make out with someone.
And if that ever came out in their work, because they get real detailed,
that one of the big proofs they're looking for with both male and female
witches is that they are having sex with demons,
not just that they're, you know, talking to them.
They're actually having some sort of physical interaction with them.
And it's essentially the most physical you can get with something, right?
Yeah. So especially if you're talking about multiple penetrations,
that's that's pretty intimate with the demon.
How do they explain that there aren't a bunch of demon babies around?
Oh, there are sort of.
OK, so this is how it works.
There are there's male demons and there's female demons,
at least in the inquisition period.
And the way that they breed is that essentially the female demons.
This is one of the ways that it works.
The female demons have sex with men.
Usually the female demons are on top.
That's how it works.
And they take the sperm into their bodies.
And then they transmit it to the male demons
and the male demons can impregnate women.
But it's actually with human sperm and not demonic sperm.
I mean, that's just science. Am I right?
Oh, my God.
So it's kind of gets passed around like a baton.
It really is. Yes, exactly. Yes.
Racing sperm. Yeah.
And then and then a human female has it.
And then she has a demon baby because it's a human sperm
that's passed through to at least two demons. Exactly. Yeah.
So it's not really physically a demon baby.
But it was caused by a demon.
Cursed and haunted zygotes guaranteed to pass through at least two
organic demons before implantation.
Did you ever see Rosemary's baby?
I did. Yes.
Is that how medieval demon babies were described or was it different?
In the end, when she has it, it's actually like scary demonic looking.
Right? I think so. Yeah.
What have you done to its eyes?
He has his father's eyes.
What are you talking about?
Guys, eyes are normal.
What have you done to him, you maniac?
Satan is his father, not guy.
He came up from hell and begat a son of mortal woman.
Hail Satan.
Alyssa says medieval demon babies were just more run in the mill looking.
You know, these end up just looking like normal babies.
And that's also part of the fear is that you never really know
because it just looks like a normal human.
Anyone could have been the product of this kind of bizarre multiple union.
You can't tell the the offspring of this kind of union just by looking at them.
Are they jerks? Demons?
Demon babies? Oh, I was going to say all babies.
They do cry and they shit on you.
Yes, yes, they bite your boobs.
Yeah, so I don't think any more than the normal babies.
Colic demon baby doesn't sleep through the night.
Demon baby babbling in tongues.
That's a demon baby.
What is the biggest demon flim flam that you want to debunk?
What's some real bullshit horsepucky that you're like, this is that's not what demonology is about?
I think it's probably the idea that and this might just go for religious studies
in general, since that's my field.
A, we're not all sitting around like practicing whatever we're teaching, right?
You have no idea how many times, especially with students who take our classes,
people think that they're going to be indoctrinated into something.
And it's sad because in some ways it really stops people from taking those sorts of courses.
And I think they're really useful just for understanding different cultures.
So I guess that would be my major thing.
Is that you're not going to walk out of here with demonic powers?
Right. Yes, I'm not.
I'm not going to teach you spells, right?
We're not going to have the goat sacrifice practicum at the end of class.
Yeah, that would be my major thing.
Can I ask you questions from listeners?
There's so many. Of course, yeah.
OK, so before we ask questions from patreons and there are so many,
a quick break to tell you about the sponsors of the show who make it possible for us to donate
to a charity of the oligarchs choosing each week.
And this week, Alyssa wanted her donation to be split between doctors without borders
that facilitates global first responders to emergencies, epidemics and natural disasters
and provides medical relief in conflict zones.
And the other donation went to Planned Parenthood,
which is a nonprofit organization that provides sexual health care in the United States
and globally. So links to both of those and to these sponsors will be in the show notes.
OK, let's get to your questions.
OK, we can just do this like a lightning round.
We'll get through as many as we can.
All right. So many good questions.
Mary Rose B says pumped for this.
She says, what famous demon cases do you think are true, if any?
Oh, like actual possession.
Ah, that's that split brain thing again.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, I want to take people at their word when they say that they're possessed.
I believe you.
And then my scientific brain is back here going, no, no.
I don't believe you.
So I'm not sure about that one, actually.
I don't know how I would answer that.
I think exercise Emily Rose is supposed to be based on a true story.
And I would love to sort of dive more into that actual story.
But then again, based on true story, we never know what that means in movies, right?
Exactly. Yeah.
P.S. I was unfamiliar with this tale
and the exorcism of Emily Rose was based on the story of Annalise Michelle,
who was a woman who had epilepsy and psychiatric illnesses
that just didn't respond to treatment.
And so she and her family became convinced it was a possession.
So she endured a year of exorcism rights in the mid 1970s.
And in the process, she stopped eating and she died of starvation.
And she had shattered kneecaps from kneeling so much.
There's just nothing not awful about what she and her family went through.
And her parents and a priest were found guilty of negligent homicide
because of what she went through.
And I just want to say big thanks to anyone studying how the brain works.
That would have saved a lot of people, a lot of demonic suspicions.
The more we know about how our brain meets work, the better off we all are.
So this next question was also asked, by the way, by Kathleen Sachs.
Chris, Paul's wants to know how many names does Satan, Lucifer,
metastopheles have throughout history?
So many so much branding.
There is. But a lot of it is also mistranslation.
So, yeah, there are a lot of different names that come from these various sources.
So Lucifer goes back to that idea of light, right?
In the Greco-Roman pantheon.
So there are a lot of different names that come out of different authors.
Lucifer doesn't get popular, I think, until like Milton or Dante, one or the other.
I can never remember which.
P.S. Milton is the poet John Milton, who penned an epically long poem
called Paradise Lost.
And it was about Adam and Eve and the fallen angel Satan.
It was published in 1667.
So close, so close.
You know, his publicist must have been so pissed, like one year earlier, man.
I want to make good marketing.
But yes, some folks wrap up all the names for Satan into one guy,
kind of like how I call my dog Gremlin or Grammy Land or Grams or Grammy
or Monkey Bud or Monkey Face or Meat Beast or Poochie or Rumpel Snuggles, etc.
Satan, I feel like, probably loves nicknames.
Now, some authors think, though, that there are seven distinct princes of hell.
Like in the late 1500s, Peter Binsfield thought each prince of hell represented
their own sin. Lucifer was pride, Mammon was greed, Asmodeus, lust, Leviathan, Envy,
Beasalbub was gluttony, Satan was wrath, and Belfagor, good old Belfagor, was sloth.
So you haven't a real lazy day, Belfagor made you do it.
Now, who asked about the show Supernatural?
Quite a few of you have been watching it, including Samantha J Gunther, Lauren
Harder, Caitlin Fitzgerald and Gianna Rookvick.
OK, a lot of people, including Lauren Harder, Samantha Riley-McKinnis,
asked about the Supernatural show.
And Lauren says, I watch more seasons of Supernatural than I want to admit.
And I'd love to know how they did it with all the various
incendiary demons and monsters from different cultures.
So how, where are they getting all of the demons for Supernatural?
OK, I have a confession to make, which is that I have not watched Supernatural.
I know everybody asks me this.
I don't know why I never got into it.
I watched like the first episode and just said, eh.
OK, I know, I know, I feel really bad about that.
So I'm sorry to all of the readers who wanted to or listeners who wanted to know that.
Yeah, I think I stopped with Buffy and then ages me.
So, yes, yeah.
Some people asked about Buffy, actually.
Oh, that's good.
Yay, Buffy.
Laura Durgovich says, everything I know about demons I learned from Buffy,
Angel, which demons in the Weed and Verse are recognizably drawn
from known sources and which ones are totally original?
Oh, I think he's really good at doing his research, actually.
Yeah. Yeah.
So I would say that most of the demons in Buffy the Vampire Slayer
have some source historically.
I mean, he gets creative with them, right?
He he certainly, you know, turn them into lounge singers and things like that.
First, I was afraid.
I was petrified.
But I think he's done his research.
I really do.
And I think when it comes down to the shows like Buffy and Angel,
he's done his research.
So I would say most of them are historical.
Oh, nice.
And it's I feel like it's in some way it's
it gives you more cred if they're historical.
And also you probably have to do less work.
So exactly bonus.
Yes.
Also, I had to stop and ask myself, is Joss Whedon a demon?
I have bad feelings about him.
And yes, I googled it.
And in an open letter in 2017, his former wife laid bare
quite a bit of deceit and infidelity on his part.
So what's his excuse?
Was he possessed or just a successful dude in Hollywood?
Being gross.
Thinking it's a ladder.
Now, speaking of possession, the following folks wanted to know more about it,
including first time question asker, Rick Tull Hartley, Evan Munro,
Lacey Net, Ducks Float, Ryan and Jasmine.
First time question asker, Megan Borosa, Jennifer Downey, Amanda Longo,
Lexi Bonafate, Michael Sherman, Celeste Lewis, Alexandra Marcanova, Joe Portofito,
Emily Dech and Sarah.
So Erica wants to know what the heck is actually going on in reported instances
of demon possession.
OK, scientific brain first.
Something.
Something psychologically unresolved, maybe.
My religious studies brain wants to say
whatever demon or God they think is possessing them.
I don't want to necessarily write it off as being fake,
at least from the perspective of how that person is interacting with their own world.
You know, again, the religious studies side of me says,
whatever that person tells you is going on is what is actually going on.
You know, that we have to take them seriously about it.
And then, yeah, scientific brain in the back is saying
they're not really possessed.
But I don't know.
OK, side note, there are scientific papers of plenty describing medical conditions
like Tourette's syndrome, epilepsy, encephalitis or brain inflammation,
dissociative identity disorder, schizophrenia and psychosis
that would, to some, look like demonic possession.
And a 2014 article that ran in culture, medicine and psychiatry titled, quote,
a village possessed by witches, a mixed method,
case-controlled study of possession and common mental disorders in rural Nepal.
Researchers in this found that, quote, possessed women reported higher rates
of traumatic events and higher levels of symptoms of mental disorder compared
to non-possessed women, some more anxiety, depression and PTSD.
So some researchers think that the process of letting a spirit or a demon
act out through you gives an outlet for distress.
So a way to express the pain of mental illness or
socio-political violence or past trauma or oppression.
So not unlike our sloth being blamed on Belfdor,
a demon can throw things and express anger and pain in a way
that the possessed aren't usually allowed to in their regular life.
So, of course, we're still learning how the brain works
and who the actual hell knows what the future will unfold about,
like vaping or staring at cell phones.
Who knows what our brains are going through?
Several people asked, what's up with pentagrams?
That has something to do with demons, right?
It does.
Pentagram, it has a lot of different symbolic uses, again, throughout history.
So you can see them all over in Greco-Roman art and they're not evil.
They're not associated with anything satanic.
Well, because, you know, Greco-Romans don't believe in the
the idea of Satan, Greco-Romans, as though that's a group.
Greeks and Romans didn't believe in that sort of concept.
You start to see it as a kind of reversed symbol.
So sort of like when you flip a cross upside down,
it becomes a symbol of evil, right?
The same thing sort of happens with the the idea of the pentagram.
It's usually with point down if you see it in like films about satanic cults
and things like that.
Traditionally, the right side up pentagram wouldn't have been a negative symbol.
It's only when it's reversed that it becomes satanic.
It's usually good luck, sort of the right side up one.
And modern day Wicca obviously uses the pentagram as a symbol as well.
And certainly not satanic and certainly not evil.
So maybe that's one of the misconceptions
that I should be clearing up right now is that witches don't worship Satan.
Wiccans aren't into that at all.
Do you see the same thing with the swastika?
The swastika in ancient India is a extraordinarily positive symbol, good luck symbol.
And what you see in Nazi Germany is the reversal of that symbol into the swastika.
And it obviously takes on completely different connotations.
And do you think that also plays into this psychological binary
that we used to cope with what is good and what is evil?
Like, do we need to take something and flip it completely on its head?
Take some idea of a loving God and then switch it into some
some guy who lives in the depths of hell that wants to boil our balls and stuff.
Oh, for sure. Yes. Yes.
And if you have an all powerful God, that gets super scary, too.
Because if you have an all powerful God, and this is kind of a classic
theological question, why are bad things still happening to us?
So we have to come up with some sort of powerful evil to explain that.
Otherwise, it all has to be God and nobody's really good with that.
Like, nobody wants to think that God is doing all of this bad stuff.
So we have to come up with some kind of reversal of powers there.
And then you reverse the symbols, right?
Like, God wouldn't let me trip, but obviously I've been done by a trickster.
Exactly. Yeah. Yeah.
A lot of people, Laura Stacy, Nikki Finger and Nadav Leventov
asked about 666 being the number of the beast and why.
I should know that.
I don't know, right? No, I don't know.
Yeah, I should know that. And I do not know that.
I'll look it up. Yeah, good.
Let me think of how how many properties are undervalued
because they have 666 in the address. Exactly.
As long as we're just tossing numbers around, how about Revelation 13, 15
through 18, which reads, here is wisdom, let him that half
understanding count the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man.
And his number is 603 score and six.
Other scholars are like, I think that translation is off.
Maybe your math is wrong and it's supposed to be 616.
Oops, everyone in Grand Rapids.
You just skirted maybe having the area code of the beast.
But no one's scared of 616 like they are of 666.
No one with 616 addresses is scrambling with the county
to change their mailbox numbers, like one couple in Spring Lake Park, Minnesota,
who recently had to fork over about $100 in fees to change their address,
saying they weren't superstitious, but it was just hard to get plumbers
and electricians out.
And the perhaps accursed 666 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan,
which was purchased in what ended up being a terrible decision
by Trump and law Jared Kushner, is much to get a makeover
that includes new windows and an address change, while still remaining
neatly wedged at 52nd and 53rd between a church and a victorious secret.
Oh, perhaps that might inspire someone to write a sequel to Rosemary's Baby.
Joshua Horton wants to know, where does this where does the legend
that you should sell your soul to a demon at a crossroads come from?
Oh, crossroads again.
If you sink back into Greco Roman mythology, I know I keep bringing that up.
No, it has a huge place.
Yeah, it's definitely the site of power crossroads of all kinds, the site of power.
So I assume, again, that's one of those fear of particular sites of power
and not they're not necessarily evil, but it's sort of like the liminal space
between worlds almost at the crossroads.
What you're afraid of you might encounter.
Yeah, yeah, it's not necessarily evil power.
It's power period, right?
If people see something like a crossroads or that type of space
as being just innately powerful, it could end up being something scary.
So we're going to develop stories out of that being the place in the world
where to put it sort of strangely, the veil is thin, so to speak,
sort of like on Halloween, right?
The veil between worlds is thin.
And do you feel like in your work, Halloween is kind of a busier time for you
because we're all in that in that spirit, if you will?
Oh, yeah, it's always fun, especially in the religion classes
when Halloween rolls around.
I always want to dress up and go into class and I never do.
So I really should.
It's definitely a fun time of the year.
It's probably my favorite holiday still.
Do you give extra credit for people who dress as historical demons?
No, I shouldn't.
I'll tell my students that you suggested that.
If you had to dress as a demon in history, what would you go in it?
The demon that I dress as.
The only the only one I've ever dressed as, and it's not really demonic,
I did the classic devil with a blue dress one Halloween.
Oh, that's amazing.
Yeah, it's a really easy costume, though.
I was just being super lazy.
So many people asked about demons across various cultures,
and I'm going to say your names with my mouth so fast.
Matt and Green Dalton, Becky Woodruff, Hadley, Sarah Jean Horwitz,
Rosie Crockett, Casey Flint, Hannah N, Tay Allen, Andy Schuster,
Anna Thompson, Julia Skulligan, Liz Johansson,
Jeffrey Kat, Sydney Brown, Donald MacLeod, Rot, Lenny Bauer,
Liana Schuster, Megan, Jessica Tubasing, Jesse Cole,
Megan Emanuel, Shanchez, Maya Ramon, Josie Gombas,
David M. Williams, Clark Bennett, Maria Delgado Gomez,
Shea Goodard, Kathleen Saxe, Katie Noll, Enrica Sarmiento,
Ryan Clark, Leon Schuster, Catherine Finney,
Alex Ellison, Marissa Noll, and Cannon Purdy, who asked,
what are some differences between demons across cultures as in
Japanese demons and devils versus Christian demons versus Pagan?
Right. So how do we see those across a lot of different cultures?
Some of them are positive.
And I think that's the main distinction, that some of them
are really positive creatures, even though they might still get
called demons. We have such a negative association with that
word in the English language, much like we do with the term
possession. But in other cultures, again, they're they're
spirit beings. And they can be scary. I mean, they can be scary
as all hell. But they're only scary towards evil people.
So they're much more protective than they are, like, attacking
good people. So I think that's the major distinction still
across cultures is that demons aren't always bad. Like Thailand,
you get and in Japan, you get these protective figures that we
would really perceive as being demons because of how they look.
And they almost would look like our classic idea of what a
demonic presence would be. But they're protective.
So it's like a cool goat bitch having your back. Also, a few
of you had sleep paralysis questions. And we do talk about
this in a some knowledge episode with Dr. Chris Winter. But for
this one, E. Kristen Anderson, Bruce R. Cordell, Rachel Weiss,
Katie Knoll, and Skulligan all asked, asked about sleep
paralysis, and about how that was considered to be a demon
sitting on your chest. But yeah, you know, we know a little bit
better now. Are there other ways in which demons have been
implicated in ancient or medieval medicine? Folks want to
know?
Yes. So crib death, for sure. Again, going back to babies. It
was often if you had somebody dying unexpectedly, and
particularly if children died unexpectedly, that would get
attributed to demons. In some cases, what we would think of
today is sexually transmitted diseases. You could link those
to demons as well. Oh, infertility, for sure. And male
impotency. Yeah, always blame male impotency on demons, right?
It's not my fault. It's that demon over there that did it to
me.
The old demon makes alcoholic dick trickery, i.e. probably just
drank too much meat.
So yeah, a lot of medical stuff got got sort of put on the
shelters of demons so that people didn't have to deal with it
themselves. Oh, yeah, I have to say Viagra does sound like a
Greek goddess.
Does, doesn't it? Yeah, you wonder why the inquisitors were so
interested in writing about this stuff too. I guess we don't
have to wonder that much. But yeah, they were very concerned
with sexuality. So
Well, I understand that that 50 Shades of Grace started out as
Twilight fanfics.
I know, I'm related. Yeah.
In a let's see, Jillian's mom 16 asked, is there a certain kind
of person or emotional state that demons prey on?
If demons are real, then I would feel like they would prey on.
Oh my gosh. I guess people who were having a really difficult
time in their lives, that would make sense. I would think that
would open them up to some kind of demonic presence. If people
are looking for for some kind of power in their lives, maybe
something like depression is almost a thinning of the veil
in darkness and light. Right. Right. So I don't know. Maybe
demons are like, he's bummed out. I'm gonna go fuck with him.
Exactly. Yes.
Interesting. What an asshole. Yeah. A few people, including
Raymond J. Doge asked, where did God bless you actually
originate? What is the flimflam about the devil and sneezing?
It would be, there was a fear in a lot of cultures that
sneezing sort of opened your, it allowed your soul to get out
of your body. So that all of the different sort of God bless you
and gazointite and all of that sort of thing was supposed to
be almost a countermeasure to that.
Protection like, keep it in there. Exactly.
It's not off of me. A few people had questions about famous
demonologists Ed and Lorraine Warren, including Juan Pedro
Martinez and Aaron Elizabeth Becker wants to know how you feel
about Ed and Lorraine Warren, who were kind of demonologists.
Yeah. I don't know. It's sort of like watching ancient aliens,
right? It's fun for a while. But I don't know.
I don't really have much of an opinion on professional
demonologists. I don't know her. I want to study them. I guess.
Yeah. Sure. I mean, you study the people who study demons,
which makes sense. Exactly. Yeah. Greg Wallach has a great
question. Are personal demons the scariest of all?
Of course. Right. Yeah. And I think it has a lot to do with how
we depict these sorts of things cross culturally. It really does
come down to we're trying to make our fears things that we can
deal with a lot of the time. And even putting that into a
super scary form, you know, with horns and big red, muscly
bodies and all of that. It allows us to sort of confront it in a
way that we can't when we just keep it internal. So it's like
demonist therapy, maybe. Yeah.
Makes sense. Daniel Vaughn says I've read that the Vatican has
an exorcism division and that they legit have trouble with
people willing to do this job. Is that a real thing? I believe
it came back in about a decade ago. Yes. So for a while, I
think the church had sort of debunked the whole idea of
exorcisms and possession. But I think it's actually there is
now a division, but it's relatively recent that it's
come back into vogue, so to speak. I guess now that the Pope is
on Twitter, you could always just ask him about it. Jessica Lou
wants to know what is the worst demon horror movie you have
ever seen? Oh, gosh, I was just thinking of this the other day,
the Prince of Darkness. Okay, it's really old. Well, not really
old. It's like the 80s late 80s horror movie. It's wonderful
and horrible at the same time. It's all around this concept of
a corrupt priesthood, surprise surprise, called the
Brotherhood of Sleep. And they're they're keeping Satan in
this sort of Tupperware jar kind of thing. Anyway, so and it
obviously finally breaks free. I look this up. And it's a lot of
gooey special effects makeup, and people vomiting garden hoses of
water on each other. Oh, oh, and the cameos. Famously Alice
Cooper has a role in it. Oh, God, wonderful. So yeah, Prince of
Darkness, if you haven't seen that one, watch that one. Okay,
yeah. A few people had questions about D&D. This
Dungeani Dragony question was also asked by Baron and Dion
Dabolo. James Hales wants to know how accurate are the D&D
monster manuals in regard to demons? I still have one sitting
behind me right now. I do. They're great. No, they really are.
There's another sort of people who did their research really
well. A lot of them are based on either demigods or all sorts of
things from other mythologies. So monster manual is a good way to
go, especially if you are trying to write a story or write a film.
And I love I mean, just the the different powers that they all
get. It's so great. The minds that created those things are
wonderful.
On the topic of books, Mandy Smith has a question. Are there
any good books where I can learn about different demon witchy
etc. symbols? Mandy says I've been watching a lot of Super
Natural. Just really want to learn about them. But other than
taking your course, I mean, people could always just go to
school. Yes, there are a lot. I mean, it depends on the period
that you're interested in. Obviously, I love the medieval
period for this stuff. There is a fantastic book if you're
really interested in how it went down. This is sort of like,
you know how you have like academic crushes sometimes on
particular authors. I all of this started when I read one
particular book called Demon Lovers by a guy named Walter
Stevens. It's just a brilliant book. And it's really detailed.
And his research is fantastic. But he writes so well. So that
would be one of my suggestions. It's not like overly academic.
I mean, it's it's very academic, but it's so well written that
you don't really notice it. So demon lovers, excellent.
Vince, Alasha and a few others wanted to know what your opinion
is on ghost hunting and demon hunting reality shows. I love
them. Can you trust them? Do you love them? I love them. Yeah, I
love watching them. And my husband mocks me for it. Because
again, I don't believe in ghosts. But then I sit there watching
ghost hunters, right? Makes no sense. I've never seen them show
anything that proves it to me. But I, for some reason, obviously
still enjoy the shows. I mean, it's because they structure it
to where you have to watch after the commercial break. That's
how they get you. Of course. Yeah.
This is going on.
What is your least favorite thing about studying demonology?
What sucks? Is it grading papers? Is it is it a manuscript
microfiche? What's something that just sucks about the field or
about demons?
Well, yeah, nobody likes grading papers. I've never met a
professor who enjoys grading papers. That's for sure. I
think probably some of the misunderstandings, like I said
about the field, that's a problem. I've had students end up on
prayer circles, because they were taking my classes. I've had
students get threatening emails because they were taking my
classes. Yeah, it's so there's there's a lot of misunderstanding
out there about that. So probably one grading papers to you are
never going to make money being in religious studies ever. But
the misunderstandings probably the big thing.
And what is your favorite thing about your study of demons? What
do you love the most?
It's it's how it can tie into so much other stuff. So I love
traveling, like I have a real problem with travel, I want to
constantly be traveling. And this this ties into it perfectly,
because like I said, you look at the Thai demons, and they're
so completely different from the Japanese stuff from the ancient
Greco Roman things. So every culture you go into, you can find
something about this. And so that's really what's fun for me is
that I can tie all of this together, and have a good time
doing it.
When you're traveling, do you ever have to worry about demons
trying to hide your passport before they leave and you
diary us?
I'm such a freak about my passport, I always know exactly
where it is. And it's usually in my purse, just in case I need to
sort of make a break for it. Yeah, constant joke that every time
we drive past an airport, I'm sort of nudging my husband, like
let's just go, we don't have to go to Thanksgiving dinner, let's
just go do something else.
So love it, you're just like ready to jam in it.
Totally. Yes. In fact, I usually keep a little backpack of a
change of clothes and stuff in the car, just in case I get to
take off somewhere.
The travel demon.
I know that's true.
Thank you so much for doing this. I'm less afraid of demons
actually. Not that I was really scared, but yeah, now I just
feel like they're just, they just want to watch me trip and fall.
And they're also in my own head.
Yes, yes. And you can just, you know, go get a little statue of
one of the cute Thai rainbow demons and keep that little
protect you.
I love them.
Yeah.
Thank you so much for doing this. Have a safe Halloween.
Thank you, Ellie. You too.
This has been awesome.
So ask smart scholars, stupid, spooky questions because they
are just treasure troves of lore.
Now there are tons of links in the show notes and up at
alleyward.com slash oligies slash demonology.
And to follow Dr.
Elisa Beale, she's at elisa.beale on Instagram.
We are oligies on Twitter and Instagram.
I'm Ali Ward with one L on both.
So do follow along there.
Ologies Merch is available at oligiesmerch.com.
Thank you, Shannon Feltas and Bonnie Dutch of the podcast.
You are that for managing that.
And thank you, Aaron Talbert and Hannah Lippo for
admitting the Facebook oligies podcast group.
Thank you to Emily White and all of the oligies transcribers
who are making transcripts available.
You can go to alleyward.com slash oligies dash extras.
For those, I'll pop that link in the show notes and you can
join that Facebook group of transcribers if you want to
help make transcripts available.
You can also search the transcripts on the site if
you're looking for particular passages you want to remember.
Thank you also to devilishly handsome assistant editor
Jared Sleeper for helping me with some spooky research and
driving like 15 of the 16 hours on this weekend's road trip to
see my family.
You're the best.
Thank you to the always wonderful Steven Ray Morris for
pulling all the pieces together each week.
And to Nick Thorburn who wrote and performed the theme music.
And if you listen all the way to the end, you know, I tell you a
secret each week.
And this week is that I've never seen the omen or the
exorcist and they're both so terrifying.
But honestly, it's the barfing in the exorcist that I'm like
most afraid of.
That seems like it would just really stick with you, man.
I feel like I saw just a millisecond of a clip and I'm
like, well, that's enough.
That's enough of that.
Also, I'm just going to be very honest.
I'm hella happy to be finishing this episode because after
working on it late last night, getting ass deep and demon trivia,
I had nothing but a horror show of LA traffic getting to the
airport this morning at like five in the morning.
There was tons of traffic.
My Lyft driver got lost.
I had to run through TSA.
My shoes alarmed.
I had to throw my shoe on the belt.
It fell behind the X-ray machine and all the TSA people were
like, sucks to be you, man.
So then I had to run through LAX with no shoes.
I just ditched that shoe like a very haggard, bleary eyed, sad
Cinderella.
I just left a shoe.
I didn't have any other shoes in my luggage.
So then I just ran in socks all the way through the American
terminal.
I finally got to my gate and they're like, we can't let you
want to play without shoes.
You freak.
And I was like, whatever, I'll buy shoes and I get to Boston.
So then my producer, luckily, had tossed an extra pair of shoes
in her bag.
I put on her shoes.
Thank you, Stephanie.
Thank you, Carly.
You're both the best.
I made it on the flight, but I'm still hoarse from panting.
And I'm just saying I'm over this demon shit.
You guys, I'm sorry demons.
I hope we're all good now.
I'm going to burn a cinnamon stick or something.
And I really just hope that George Clooney doesn't try to pull
any shit on me either for that matter too.
Okay, buddy.
All right.
Okay, bye.
Demons, demons, demons, drink them out and do.