Radiolab - Corpse Demon
Episode Date: April 21, 2023Heaven and hell, Judgement Day, monotheism — these ideas all came from one ancient Persian religion: Zoroastrianism. Also: Sky Burials. Zoroastrians put their dead on top of a structure called The T...ower of Silence where vultures devour the body in a matter of hours. It’s clean, efficient, eco-friendly. It’s how it’s been for thousands of years. Until 2006. That’s when a Zoroastrian woman living in Mumbai snuck up into the tower and found bloated, rotting bodies everywhere. The vultures were gone. And not just at the tower — all across the country. In this episode, we follow the Kenyan bird biologist, Munir Virani, as he gets to the bottom of this. A mystery whose stakes are not just the end of an ancient burial practice, but the health of all the world’s ecosystems. The answer, in unexpected ways, points back to us. Special thanks to Daniel Solomon, Peter Wilson, Samik Bindu, Vibhu Prakash, Heather Natola and the Rapture Trust in New Jersey, and Avir’s uncle Hoshang Mulla, who told him about this story over Thanksgiving dinner. EPISODE CREDITSReported by - Avir Mitrawith help from - Sindhu GnanasambandanProduced by - Sindhu Gnanasambandanwith help from - Pat WaltersOriginal music and sound design contributed by - Jeremy Bloomwith mixing help from - Arianne WackFact-checking by - Diane Kellyand Edited by - Pat Walters Our newsletter comes out every Wednesday. It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about other ways to interact with the show. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)! Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab (https://members.radiolab.org/) today. Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org.  Leadership support for Radiolab’s science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wait, you're listening.
Okay.
Alright.
Okay.
Alright.
You're listening to Radio Lab.
Radio Lab.
From WNYC.
WNYC.
Alright, we're going to begin today's episode at a golf course wedding venue, sort of with our contributing editor
and resident ER doctor of your Mitra.
Parsie time.
Now, one thing you need to know at the jump of this story
is that a viewer was raised in part in this religion
that is mostly practiced in South Asia
called Zoroastrianism.
In particular, Indian Zoroastrians are called Parsis.
It's not a big religion, less than 200,000 followers,
but a fair number of them happened to be here in South Jersey.
Ah!
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
You're probably a bit...
They rent out this space once a month
to socialize, read scripturied, tons of home-made Indian food,
but this time of year, we did not send him there for that.
So, I don't grab some snack.
Although it sounds like he did do some of that.
Okay.
So, I'll have to be sticking this in your face. I hope you don't mind.
This time, he was there to talk with his priest.
My name is Gauras Desai.
About the mystery of what happens after you die.
But not at all in the way that you think.
I'm Lulu.
And I'm Lotheth. This is Radio Lab.
And we should mention that this episode does deal with death,
and there are a few brief graphic descriptions
as well as a couple swear words.
Please listen with care.
All right, here's a veer.
Every time I tell people about how we, I guess, are burial, well, it's not even, I don't
know what the word is, not burial.
It's the disposal of the dead.
Yeah, I get a lot of weird looks.
Why?
I mean, well, maybe you could tell me what is our method of disposal of bodies?
The method of disposal is exposure.
Exposure? What does that mean?
We take our dead to this place called the Tower of Silence.
The Tower of Silence?
I've been to one in Mumbai. It's this hill in the middle of this big bustling city, but when you get there,
it's like just this super forested quiet area. It almost feels like a jungle. It's so dense.
And at the top of it, there's a flat, like cement slab in a circle that's open to the sky.
And there's walls around it, but there's no roof on it.
into the sky. And there's walls around it, but there's no roof on it. And there's different layers to it. The adult men go an outer edge of this cement slab. Women will go in the middle
and children if they die will go near the center. And there's thousands of vultures surrounding
this place just waiting. Wow. The vultures would ring the whole walls all the way around,
at hundreds of them.
And then after the body was left, the vultures would descend in that.
And yeah, the vultures just devour the body, and within a few hours,
all that's left is just a few bones.
Wow. Yeah, we call it a sky burial.
And I don't know, I just think it's incredible.
Like, in the religion, the idea is that the second someone dies,
there's a corpse demon called Nasu.
And they believe that that demon is what starts to cause the decay of the body.
And so, you know, when the vultures eat the body, they're essentially protecting us from
this demon.
So, that's one thing.
There's also more practical reason if you were to bury the body, that's sort of polluting
the earth, which they don't want to do.
If you burn the body, that's polluting the sky.
And they felt that if the vultures eat the body, it recycles it back into nature.
So these people were like environmentalists.
Yes.
They were invited to the original environmentalists.
That's amazing.
It's pretty metal.
It's beautiful.
I agree.
And that's the way it is.
That's the way it's been for thousands and thousands of years up until 2006. This one party woman named Dunbaria,
her mom died and she had this suspicion.
Is my mom in the clear?
Has her body been consumed?
So she sneaks up into the tower,
climbs up to the top,
and what she saw there was completely horrendous.
She felt like she had to tell the world.
This is CNN, IBS.
Our bodies, I was photographs from inside the towers of silence, where the party community in Mumbai disposes of its debt.
These forbidden photographs are creating big ripples in the small community. There's just bodies, bloated, rotting bodies, disfigured bodies.
That's horrifying.
Just kind of plopped around that area.
And where you'd normally just see hundreds of vultures at the Tower of Silence, you don't
see a single one.
The bodies were left to decompose in the Towers of Silence
because they were not enough vultures to clean the body,
not pick the body clean.
The vultures are just gone.
At the tower, like everywhere, millions of vultures,
all over town, all over the state, all over India,
almost overnight, they're all gone.
Wow, okay, so the question is,
where the heck did they all go?
Yeah, that's the mystery, which brings us
when species are in dire straits to this guy.
We wear our cape, we swing through the jungles
and the forests and we save the day, right?
A man by the name of Munir Varani.
Here we go.
He's a Kenyan biologist who studies birds
and back in the late 90s,
he worked for the Paragrand Fund,
which is this organization
that basically saves birds of prey.
And he had just gotten married.
So he's at his new home in Nairobi,
just a couple of weeks into his marriage.
The telephone rang.
It was Rick.
His boss at the Paragrand Fund.
And he said, well, I'm calling you because I wanted to find out
how do you feel about going to India?
So he tells his wife, this whole marriage,
things been great.
I'm really excited about all this stuff.
I got to go.
So all I went, he flies from Kenya to India,
gets off the plane at Mumbai, and one of the first things
he does, he starts walking around this park.
It's like a tiger reserve.
And I remember distinctly this big banyan tree,
which is a phycistry, it's a tree of religious significance
in Hindu culture.
It's like a tree of life and type thing.
And what he sees are like,
at least 17 vultures that were lying,
sort of, you know, stomach down, wings spread out.
You mean they were dead?
They were all dead.
They were dead.
17 dead vultures underneath of it.
Oh, what a stark like image,
what a metaphor, just the tree of life,
and then all this death.
Yeah.
And this makes no sense to manoeir
because vultures are supposed to be super tough animals.
Tough like how?
I mean, they literally eat dead things, you know?
The great thing about living things is they're pretty healthy, you know?
They're healthy enough to be alive.
And so I want to get some of that, you know?
Whatever you got going on, I want to put in my belly.
But if you died, something went wrong with you.
And now I'm just going to make you part of me, essentially, by eating you.
That's a bold move.
But secondly, the second you die, all these bacteria, viruses, and fungi that you've been
keeping at bay by being alive and having an immune system, now all of a sudden they
start taking over. So the way the vulture survive this
is they have a super acidic stomach.
It's up to a hundred times more acidic
than our stomachs.
Like battery acid stomach.
Yeah, exactly.
Like they can eat anything and it's just melts away.
Some species also piss and shit acid, okay?
Onto themselves.
Poop boots.
Poop boots, because that keeps the bugs away.
It's a little chemical defense.
Exactly.
Wow.
And if someone tries to eat the vulture,
some species have evolved this first part
to just vomit acid on the predator.
Wow, that is gnarly.
Yeah.
And it turns out that all of this is so important because if you think about it, they're basically
gobbling up all the diseases and bacteria, rabies, anthrax, all these things.
And it stops with them.
Like they're the end of the line.
They're like nature's immune system.
Right. Yeah, nature's immune system.
Yeah, that's the superpower.
And they play such an important role
that a bird just keeps evolving to become a vulture.
It's happened four times independently on Earth that we know of,
like just across the world.
Like, you know what I mean?
It's almost like if I came out with like dark side of the moon
by pink Floyd,
or like I wrote that album.
And then someone else also wrote that album.
And like four people across the country
just wrote that same album.
Why is that ear metaphor?
I love that ear metaphor.
That's a real weird metaphor.
And so going back to Manier looking at this bandian tree,
it's super weird that there's all these dead vultures underneath it.
And it gets even more puzzling because these vultures are not like old,
decrepit, you know, vultures. And it doesn't look like someone shot them, you know, they didn't
like get electrocuted in a power line or something like the birds were in great body condition.
They had a lot of body fat. There's just no reason for these birds to be dead.
Huh. This was like solving a detect, they're like a murder mystery.
So, Munir is on the case.
And what he needs is to get some dead vultures
over to a lab in the US.
Okay.
So, he goes to India and he's a young whipper snapper
and he's like,
this is what we need to do.
We need to get permits to send tissue samples
so that people around the world can look at him.
India's like, very fast.
No, you can't take these tissue samples.
Why are they worried about that?
Yeah, you know, it just kind of got tied up in red tape
because you know, India doesn't want people
taking their natural products and animals and seeds
and wildlife and, you know, making money off of it.
Okay. And by the time he's trying to negotiate and seeds and wildlife and, you know, making money off of it.
Okay.
And by the time he's trying to negotiate
with the Indian government,
the voters have already started dying off
at a incredibly rapid rate.
Like, in India, 95% of voters are already dead.
Oh my God!
That is... I mean, that is like a just...
That's insane.
It is. And so he's like, shit, like a just, that's insane. It is.
And so he's like shit, like what do I do now?
So he goes to Nepal, tries again, same thing.
They say no.
And so he decides he's gonna go to Pakistan,
a neighboring country, and see if he can get some dead
vultures there.
But I look in the skies and there are thousands of vultures and I mean thousands.
Wow.
You come across a dead buffalo or a cow and there are maybe 200 vultures that are trying
to get into it.
But isn't it bad because the vultures don't seem to be dying over there so you may miss
the problem?
There's a twist.
We're still finding a few dead vultures.
And they're showing the exact clinical signs. They should not be dead,
right? He's there right before it happens. It's almost like he gets to rewind time just a little bit.
I yelled. So he's like, oh, this is perfect. Like, okay, this is where we should work, right?
But of course, the question lies, are we going to get tissue samples out of that country?
He goes to the main guy in Pakistan, the bureaucrat
who's going to give him permission.
And he's like, all right, God changed my approach.
So how am I going to do this?
First of all, the India Pakistan cricket series
was going on, right?
And as people know, there's a big rivalry
between India and Pakistan.
It looks at me and he says, Munir,
you want me to give you a permit to export tissue samples.
Give me one reason why I should give you that.
And I said, Dr. Khalid, if you don't give us this permit, then the Indians will beat you to it.
He bluffs.
He bluffs.
Boom. I just knew I hadn't.
So they gave us permits to export tissue samples.
Wow. Go in there.
Yeah. So off we started.
They get together a group of young research assistants
and basically had them pick up these dead vultures
and cut them open.
And what they see is striking.
The inner organs were covered with a white chalky paste.
Does that look like toothpaste?
Like what does it look like?
It's like powder, white powder,
all over the liver, the heart, the lungs, everywhere.
Can you wipe it off? Like it's literally a substance.
Yeah exactly. Weird.
So he goes to his senior colleague, this guy, Lindsey Oaks.
Oaks takes one look and he's like, oh, I know that is.
It's kidney failure.
Huh, what?
It turns out that if you shut down a Vultures Kidneys,
all this stuff backs up, turns into a paste
and gets deposited in all the organs.
What's that?
What that stuff is, is Uric acid.
Oh, bird shit.
Which is bird P, bird shit.
It's the stuff that's making their pee and poop so acidic.
They can't pee it out.
And so now it's just depositing in their joints,
in their organs, and you die.
Wow.
So now they know what's killing the vultures is kidney failure.
But no one knows what's causing the kidney failure.
As this story's progressing,
the situation's escalating and people
are starting to get spooked. So it is happening in Pakistan too? Yes, it's happening really quick.
Like when you first got there, there were 3,000 nesting vultures. And the next year, it was half that.
And the year after that, it was half that again. And four years in, in there down to just 400 nesting vultures. Yeah, just like that
So the leading theory at this time is that this is a virus
Right because look it started in Southeast Asia
So they're thinking okay, maybe going east to west, this virus is spreading, Southeast Asia, Nepal, India.
And if this virus moves further west into Pakistan, Afghanistan, into the Middle East, and comes into Africa, where Vultures place such an important role, the consequences would be completely dire.
Remember, these Vultures are like nature's immune system. They perform probably the most important role than any other animal or groups of animals combined.
Like, if we don't have them digesting all this bacteria, diseases, and viruses,
who knows what's going to happen to the entire world.
So we're really fighting against Tyon.
Lulu. Lotha.
Radio lab.
All right, where we at?
Things are looking very grim.
Yeah, it seems like all the vultures are dying,
and it is up to Munir and his team to try to stop it.
Yeah, exactly.
And, you know, just to step back, we know they're dying of kidney failure.
Now, what's causing the kidney failure?
In theory, it could be any number of things.
It could be a virus.
It could be bacteria, fungi.
It could be environmental changes.
It could be toxins.
And so people are testing for this and that, and they're
just not finding anything. And then in 2001, Munir and his colleague, Lindsey Oaks, we were
in a meeting in Spain. They're at some sort of bird conference. And Vulturecon. Vulturecon
exactly. They're in their head to toe Vulture costumes. I can picture it. I can picture it.
And you know, this is not a great year for VultureCon.
Everyone's covered in talcum powder.
And I remember Lindsay and I sitting
in the square in Sevilla, sitting espresso.
So Lindsay's like, let's just start from scratch here.
You know, guess get a piece of paper.
They pull out like a napkin
and just start writing on the napkin.
We were like kids just putting down
these flow diagrams, right?
Okay, what do we know?
Kidney failure.
What can cause kidney failure?
Toxins. Nothing.
Viruses. Nothing.
And then, Munir says,
Lindsay asks this question.
He said, okay.
That kind of cracks the whole thing open.
What's going into the vultures?
So it's like, well, food.
Generally, cattle, right?
Livestock.
And so Lindsay's like, we've been focusing so much
on what goes into the vultures.
Have we seen what's going into the livestock?
Huh.
So they take a new approach.
They go back to Pakistan and they start going around
to different villages and just knocking on people's doors
being like, hi, I have a bunch of questions for you about your cattle, you know. And as they're
processing the surveys, they're noticing like, oh, this phrase keeps popping up over and over again.
We just stood out. We give them DiClophonac. DiClophonac. Yeah, this drug diclofenac.
It's actually a pain killer.
It's in this class of drugs called NSAIDs,
non-steroidal and time-flamatory drugs.
That includes, you know,
drugs like Advil, Motrin,
Alive, Ibuprofen,
and these farmers were giving
Diclofenac to cattle
because cattle just like people
get old, get aches and pains.
They wake up one morning and their knees hurt.
If your cow had a limp and was unable to carry the produce
to market, you just pumped it with dichlofenac.
You just did.
And even after the cow gets like two old
to pull your cart or whatever, the farmers,
a lot of times at least the Hindu ones,
would still give them dichlofenac
because they're seen as sacred animals.
Half of me is a rastron, the other half of me is Hindu.
So Hindus, you know, they don't eat cows.
I mean, I do eat beef, but don't tell my grandma or whatever.
I'll never forget I was like in eighth grade and I was like telling my grandma who doesn't
speak much English and I don't speak much Bengali.
She's like, we don't eat cow.
And I was like, yeah, I do,
cause I love burgers, that's made of cow.
And she's like, no, no, it's not.
You don't eat cow.
So then I called my dad into the room.
I was like, dad, aren't burgers made out of cows?
And he just straight up was like, no,
and just walked out of the room.
And I was like confused for like five years after this.
So anyway, Munir and the team realized that farmers are giving their cattle this drug,
this painkiller, dieclofenac.
So they take some organs, send them to the US and test for levels of the drug, and sure
enough, all the vultures that were covered in that chalky white paste came back positive. Huh.
And so suddenly a pattern was evolving.
But that's still not a...
I feel like we've gotten, you've connected the dots, but it's the dot that needs to be
connected.
It's now, it's in the vulture, but we don't know for sure it's causing the sickness.
I love that you said that, Letha, because we see DiClophonac in the vultures that are
dead,
but it's not the reason that they're dead.
And so now we have to show that experimentally.
So this is where things have to get really dark.
Oh, this story has been just a fun, fatty cake until now.
Yeah.
So I told you, you know, vultures dying left and right,
Munir and his team studying these Vultures.
They see all these poor baby Vultures.
These were birds that fell off the nests
after their parents died.
And so they have been over time
sort of sheltering some of these baby Vultures
and raising them.
And giving them what to feed like little dead rats?
Yeah, little dead rats, all little, you know, whatever.
Dead chickens.
Boogie vulture.
Okay.
These, these vultures are doing great.
And they realize the only way that they can really.
Don't tell me.
Yeah.
Keep telling me.
Say it.
I don't know where you're going.
Where you going?
The only way they can really prove, for sure,
if Diclofenac kills vultures, is to poison their babies.
They swapped out their perfect Whole Foods meals with some buffalo that had been given Diclofenac. and they died.
And on top of that, they realized all the vultures died in India first because the drug was approved there like four years before it was approved in Pakistan.
Whoa!
So it wasn't an ecological spread, it was a market spread
that they were seeing like wash across the continent. That's wild. Yeah, it was amazing
It just
It felt like a huge
burden had been lifted off my back
And so in May 2003
2003, Munir and his team go back to VultureCon and Lindsey Yokes gets up on stage and announces it. With his very soft voice and he just talks about the meticulous way.
Here's what we study. Here's what we found. Here's what we did to our pet vultures. Here's what happened.
And then there was pin drop silence.
And then there was this applause that just went on and didn't stop and people stood up.
They all realized like, this is it.
Wait, I guess I'm just wondering, was there any parallel where, where you asked Vulture
studying off?
Yeah, I think the difference is like,
we don't care as much about cows in the US.
Oh, so they're not living, oh, so they're not,
we're eating the meat, so the Vulture's aren't getting it.
Right, we just eat them when they're like
young and healthy before they have any problems.
It's so weird that this is about like caring for the cow,
makes you wanna like make the cow not be in pain, which then
surprisingly apparently kills all the vultures.
Yeah, it's weird.
And as a doctor, I can kind of relate to that.
I prescribe these N-Sed drugs like ibuprofen, motren, aloeve, abville.
I prescribe these all the time.
And believe it or not, one of the most common causes of kidney injury in
humans is also NSAIDs. Really? Yeah. Which is funny, right? Because like, we were looking
at these vultures saying like, oh, that's so bizarre. It's just like, Klofenac is messing
up their kidneys. Meanwhile, in a different parallel universe of medicine, we're not talking
to each, I don't talk to vulture biologist. They don't talk to me, right?
Like we're figuring the same thing out in humans.
Wow.
So when was like, yeah, when did when did the show just become real?
When did we become aware of this? Yeah, it does.
There were case studies coming out all along the way.
But the landmark study was in the year 1999.
Okay.
So interesting, right? Because like the vulture thing is happening at the year 1999. Okay. So interesting, right?
Because like the culture thing is happening at the same time.
Yeah, yeah.
And we've also learned that they can cause intestinal bleeding, strokes, heart attacks, all these problems trickle down from the use of NSADS.
Whoa, why?
Yeah.
Basically, you know, NSADS are inhibiting this molecule that cause pain.
And so you take them and you don't feel pain, which is great.
But it turns out that these same molecules do a lot of really important stuff in the body.
And so when you inhibit them, you know, you cause all these other problems that no one
anticipated when we made these drugs.
Okay, I have a million questions, I'm gonna just cut to the chase.
Like, we take these drugs all the time, all of us.
Like, should we stop taking these drugs?
No, that's what I want.
No, I don't wanna scare you into thinking like,
these are evil drugs.
They're great drugs, they work really great.
But they're not candy.
The way we think about it in the hospital is as
sure as a quick like thing is like if you're over 65 and taking these drugs every single day
for months on end like see a doctor, let's figure something out for you. Oh, interesting. Okay.
If you're young, like don't worry about this, if you're healthy, don't worry about this,
and in general, don't freak out about this at all. But this is more of a macro scale, you know?
Like I just see there being a vulture-faced reaper
who's like, oh, you're trying to avoid pain?
Oh, you're trying to avoid death?
Like, it's like, like if you budge it over here,
it's gonna budge right back over there, you know
Mm-hmm
That's how it feels to me as like a doctor. It's very frustrating because you know
Yeah, what am I supposed to do and you know, I'm gonna keep taking these meds. I'm gonna keep giving these meds
they work
They do they do help people all right, right, but yes, like you said, there's a little cost there.
Yeah.
Or I mean, I guess a big cost
if you're one of those unlucky people
who get sick and dies from the drug.
Yeah.
Or I guess if you're a vulture.
Well, the vultures are doing okay.
Actually, scientists found an alternative drug
for the cows and India, Pakistan, and Nepal.
They all got together and actually banned
Diclofenak for veterinary use.
Wow.
Okay.
And the populations of vultures stabilize.
So that's that story.
Huh.
What does that mean for the Tower of Silence?
Is it back?
No, not exactly.
Because, you know, these vultultures only have one offspring per year.
It's a slow process.
What is a rastrian doing in the meantime when they lose somebody?
For parcys, it's still rough.
They started by trying to use chemicals that they would put on the bodies to help them
decompose faster.
Another thing they considered was putting a big sun glass, like basically think of like a magnifying
glass where you like, if you're a kid, you like burn ants with a magnifying glass. Yeah, this feels
dangerous. So they're thinking about that. We have to sit over here.
Eventually I started wondering, what about you and you die?
What do you want to do?
What is my mom want?
Well, since there are no vultures anymore, which I actually think is a great idea, but
since there aren't any vultures left, I would prefer to be cremated or the new green burial
thing.
You know, I wouldn't mind if a tree grew using my body.
But when my mom said that, I kind of thought like,
wait a minute, like, no, like I thought the whole point was that the only way to get to heaven was to go through the Tower of Silence.
Oh, yeah, the author does believe that they won't go to heaven if their bodies are exposed off except in the Tower of Silence.
But, my priest says,
As far as I'm concerned, they're, they're, they're daft, they're nuts.
There's no vultures right now.
So the tower of
silence is off the table. My father died in hospital in Boston.
And we had his body cremated. He had, he himself had said that
look, if I die, don't they don't have my body shit back to India?
I've cremated over here. You don't go to have no hell, depending
on how your body is disposed of. I mean, who cares? Once you
once you're dead, you're dead. I mean, you're, you're, you're
sort of rebellious priest. I sort of a rebellious priest.
I'm not a rebellious priest. I mean, I just think for myself.
He says he's just being practical, which is what Parsis do.
What does a Parsis do? What they should do.
The whole reason our religion created the Tower of Silence in the first place is because it was practical, simple, elegant.
And now, it's not.
Until the vultures come back anyway.
Cool, thank you.
I don't have anything else.
You're very welcome.
I'm glad to have an uncle that knows everything about everything.
Stop calling me.
I'm going for crying.
I'm glad to meet you.
It makes me feel old and decrepit.
Ha ha ha.
Contributing editor of Vier Mietra.
That's our show for this week.
This episode was reported by a Vier Mietra with help from Sndunjama Sambandan.
It was produced by Sndunjama Sambandan with music and sound design by Jeremy Bloom
with mixing help by
Aryan Wack. It was edited by a rebellious editor, Pat Walters, who has been known to think
for himself, and to occasionally spit batter-yasted urine when attacked, watch out for that one,
special thanks to Daniel Solomon, Heather Natola, and the Raptor Trust in New Jersey, and a veer's uncle, Hashangmola,
who told him about this story over Thanksgiving dinner.
It's how the reporting gets done over mashed potatoes and stuffing and not hamburgers,
because a veer doesn't eat ham burgers.
I'm aulumiller. I'm Latif.
Let us know if you want us to include
Vulture poop boots in our next round of merch.
That's it.
Thanks a lot for that.
Thank you, Vulture.
Bye-bye.
Radio Lab was created by Jack Abbernrod and is edited by Soren Wheeler.
Lulumiller and Latif Nasir are our co-hosts.
Dylan Keith is our director of Sound Design.
Our staff includes Simon Adler, Jeremy Bloom, Becca Brusler,
Beto Q6, Bakedi Foster Keys, W Harry Fortuna, David Gable,
Maria Pasco, Tierra, Sindu Nyanasanban Dan, Matt QT, Anime QN, Alex Niesen, Saurkari, and
a Raskwet pass, Saur Sanback, Aryan Wack, Pat Waters, and Mali Webster, with help from
Antuvinales.
Our fact checkers are Diane Kelly, Emily Krieger, and Natalie Medellin.
This is Joel Mossbacher calling for New York City.
Leadership Support for Radio Labs Science Programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore
Foundation, Science, Sandbox, Assignment Foundation, Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation.
Foundational Support for Radio Lab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
Foundational Support for Radio Lab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.