Secretly Incredibly Fascinating - Halloween Costumes
Episode Date: October 14, 2024Alex Schmidt and Katie Goldin explore why Halloween costumes are secretly incredibly fascinating.Visit http://sifpod.fun/ for research sources and for this week's bonus episode.Come hang out with us o...n the SIF Discord: https://discord.gg/wbR96nsGg5
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Halloween costumes known for being spooky and famous too.
Nobody thinks much about them so let's have some fun.
Let's find out why Halloween costumes are secretly incredibly freakening. Hey there, folks.
Welcome to a whole new podcast episode, a podcast all about why being alive is more
interesting than people think it is.
My name is Alex Schmidt and I'm not alone because I'm joined by my co-host Katie Golden. Katie! Me! It's me. What is your relationship to
or opinion of Halloween costumes? My first Halloween I was a pumpkin. I was a little
baby pumpkin. How young? Were you one of those babies in a pumpkin outfit? I was one of those babies.
Ah, it's such a good baby costume. I was one of those babies that you swaddle them and you put
them just in a pumpkin. Like not a real pumpkin. Because so many babies are a little pumpkin in my
heart, you know? So when they're dressed as a pumpkin it's extra good. Halloween costume number
two. I was a cow. Oh, that's fantastic.
I had that look like a cow and my mom glued some yellow yarn on it so it looked like I
was eating hay.
That's really good, man.
Halloween costume number three.
I was a Tinkerbell.
I had a bag full of glitter.
I threw glitter everywhere.
It went everywhere. It got everywhere. Yeah.
I know you could riff this list, but I'm curious legitimately how many costumes in a row you could probably remember.
Okay, after that was a bat. After that was a cat.
No, those words just rhyme. You're just saying words that rhyme.
No, I'm not. I'm actually not. I remember. I was about one year and then a cat the next
year.
Cool.
Okay, that's when I stopped remembering.
That's pretty good. Either photos are my own memory. The earliest one I can remember is
my mom homemade is basically like a sandwich board thing, but it was a costume of being
Thomas the Tank Engine. And then other Thomas the Tank Engine characters, like the front
and the back on me. It was great. Made me really happy.
That tracks. Yeah. Yeah. That's very good.
Yeah. Because you can be a train who thinks and has adventures.
Honk honk. Toot toot. You're a train. And did you advertise on the back of the sandwich board,
just like, the end is nigh for you,
because you're on train tracks.
Beep beep, honk honk, get out of the way.
Yes, sandwich boards are very apocalypse guy coded.
So yeah, I was very lighthearted with that.
I love the fun, sort of creative costumes that parents do for their kids.
Like I saw one recently that was a Chobani flip cup.
It was yogurt.
Like the kids, because like kids just want stuff sometimes.
Like, and this kid wanted to be a Chobani.
To be a Chobani.
He wanted to be a Chobani.
And the parent was like, OK, let's have this happen.
And it's kind of similar, right?
Sandwich board-ish kind of set up, you know, Chobani logo printed out with like various
sort of things taped to it to make it look like the mix-ins, you know, like sprinkles,
big sprinkles that were pom-poms.
Yeah.
Boy, this is an exciting topic, you know? And shout out to
Dacoupe Bear on the Discord for suggesting it. Also, there is a
past episode about Halloween stores, which doesn't overlap
that much. You don't need to have heard it. And we also won't
cover costumes and clothes for Dia de los Muertos and other
traditions that people say are related to Halloween or are
related to Halloween.
There's a whole episode in just US and Canada style commercialized trick or treat Halloween
costumes.
Like we can do a whole episode just about that.
So it's amazing.
Got it.
It's the type of costumes from like the Simpsons where it's a radioactive man, but you've
got the plastic mask, but
then you've got a smock that has radioactive man on it. And Lisa's like, why would radioactive
man wear a plastic smock that has radioactive man on it?
Yeah, masks and smocks will even be a whole thing. Yeah. Like it's the other one I think
of is Charlie Brown trying to make a ghost costume and it's too many holes. Like this sort of tradition is what we're talking about.
Remind me in that, was he cutting out the ghost costume himself or was that like a parent
made it for him but did too many holes?
If I remember right, he did a bad job himself.
I see.
It's sort of like when he tries to write with a fountain pen and his pen pal letter is a
mess.
Like he can't effectively cut two holes and he keeps going and then it's just covered
in holes.
He's incompetent, which is why no one likes him, including his dog.
That's right.
A lack of respect for sure.
Snoopy loves him and doesn't quite respect him.
It's interesting.
There's no respect there.
Snoopy sees him as an idiot child who is a danger to himself
and to others.
Yeah. Folks, on every episode we lead with a quick set of fascinating numbers and statistics.
And this week that's in a segment called...
I was working on the numbers late one night when my eyes beheld an eerie sight.
From Alex his slab began to rise and suddenly to my surprise they did the stats.
They did numbers and stats.
The numbers stats.
They were a mathematical smash.
We did the stats. they caught on in a flush
The safe post that's we did the surf pod starts
Folks that that was a collaboration on the discord. Thank you to James Amaz, thank you to Hunter Pope, thank you to AAZK for all coming together
and workshopping that.
We have a new name for this every week.
Please make a Missillian way I can bet as possible.
Submit through Discord or to sifpotatgmail.com.
Give me more ones where I don't have to sing, but I can do like a drunk Vincent Price.
All of culture said, you're fun, Vincent Price. Yeah, Olive Culture said,
you're fun Vincent Price,
and we're going to do you in all contexts for Halloween.
It's great.
Oh, your whole personality and deal?
Thank you.
They just took it.
Yes.
The first number this week is $700 million US dollars.
The most expensive costume in the world.
I feel like later we'll talk about a candidate sort of for that.
But I think I know who it is.
I think I know who it is.
Supermodel?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
The 700 million US dollars, that's a retail industry estimate.
So it could be exaggerated, but it's kind
of the best we've got. Retail industry estimate for 2023 American Halloween spending on pet
costumes.
For animal pets.
Yeah, like you dress up your pet.
I see. That's amazing. It is very interesting. I remember when we used to work in an office building, we had like an animal Halloween
costume contest, which was very cute.
Oh, I forgot.
And that's such a good memory.
Why did I forget that?
Yeah, that's great.
Ma'am.
My dog, if I tried to dress her up in a little costume, would bite every single one of my
fingers clean off my hands.
So I don't do it.
The most I got was a little bow tie.
Oh, on her?
On Cookie?
Yeah.
That makes sense.
And I can be like, she's Bill Nye.
I don't know.
We attempted one year to put a little lion hat
on our cat Watson, who's kind of orangey.
And it's great except it fully covered his actual real life
ears. So he obviously was not pleased with it. He'd just shake it off. I was like, you're right.
That makes sense. Yeah. Yeah. It's like, I'm a cat. This is like my most important sense.
My most important sensory organ. Yeah. I think we like sort of rested it on him, got one fast picture
and then gave it away and never tried again.
We were like, that's the deal.
Perfect.
That's all you need.
Yep, that's it.
So that survey was 2023.
Going to link two different NPR stories because in 2022, an NPR team covered the question
of whether costuming is stressful for dogs specifically.
And the answer was like vague and interesting.
They talked to Candice Crony, who's a professor and the director of animal welfare science
at Purdue University.
She said there's been no direct scientific study of it as of 2022, but her general advice
is that it's kind of like all dog clothes.
So for one thing, it should fit well and let them move well.
But also if your pet never wears clothes
outside of Halloween, that's probably relatively stressful.
Yeah.
But if they often wear jackets and raincoats and stuff,
then that might be more okay.
It might be all right.
Yeah, my dog wears a thunder shirt,
which is sort of medicinal, I suppose,
but she only wears it during thunder. She which is sort of medicinal, I suppose, but she only wears
it during thunder.
She doesn't necessarily like it, but it does seem to calm her down.
So yeah, I just don't, I don't mess with that.
But I feel like dogs, there's a lot of dogs who are cool with like clothing.
I do like that one dog costume that's like the spider, where it's like, it's got all
these jiggly legs.
You put it on a small dog.
That's the best part about it is you put it on like a Chihuahua, but it kind of looks
like a giant tarantula.
And as it's walking around, all its legs are sort of jiggling convincingly.
Yeah.
And survey in 2023, they listed a top five most popular costumes for pets, like
costume ideas, you know? Number one was, I started at the top, number one was a pumpkin.
Dress your pet as a pumpkin.
Well, it's a, it's a similar sort of baby thing, right? Where it's like, you're just
a little pumpkin. So you're going to be a pumpkin. Yeah. You know, there's nothing you
can do or say about it. Just be a little gourd. Yeah, it's cool. Yeah. Yeah. And then number two,
I feel like this is especially for long dogs. Number two is a hot dog. Like great. Really
fun. Yeah. Really good. The long dog. It is, you just put the bread on because you don't
even need to make the wiener part. It's just the bread part. Right. It's just the bun.
The rest of the top five, number three is a bat, number four is a bumblebee, number five is a spider.
So all that insects and arachnid stuff.
I'm surprised at the bat one. I'm trying to figure out how that would work.
Because I was a little bat when I was a kid, but my mom sewed me wings so the
fabric would go like under my arms.
So I guess for a dog, you would just have like a sweater with like wings on the back.
You know, yeah.
But anatomically speaking, because bat wings are hands that have big, a lot of skin in
it.
So like if you just have four legs and then wings, to me, that doesn't feel bat.
That feels more like demon.
I was just thinking the other year I saw a dog dressed as an angel and the wings were
just sort of rigid and coming off a little thing on their back.
I assume the bat costume is kind of like that for a dog.
That would make sense, yeah.
But it is a chimera.
It is a weird combination of animal parts for sure.
Right.
That number five costume was a spider.
Speaking of spiders, the next number is 1963.
Okay.
The year 1963.
The year we invented spiders.
Sort of, it's the year when Marvel Comics
partnered with a costume company
to license a Spider-Man Halloween
costume.
Oh, okay, okay.
Yeah.
The web slinger himself.
Yeah, and this is kind of a pop culture and Halloween landmark because the source here
is an amazing piece for Slate.com by Charles Moss.
He says, a Spider-Man Halloween costume was the first licensed Marvel product.
Whoa, seriously. I would have thought the Hulk hands came first.
Oh, that's a really fun idea. The Spider-Man costume is a product partly of Spider-Man being
a little of an accident. He was introduced in a comic called Amazing Fantasy, issue number 15. It wasn't even a Spider-Man number one or something.
And they licensed a costume shortly after trademarking the Spider-Man character at all,
like just creating a general intellectual property of Spider-Man.
What made them feel like that was where the money was?
So it's a really weird thing. This is maybe one of the most
amazing cases of parallel thinking in pop culture history. Marvel creates the Spider-Man character
in 1962 and a full eight years earlier, a Halloween costume company called Ben Cooper Incorporated
had made a costume eight years earlier. The costume was named Spider-Man.
And it's an original idea where it's like a yellow outfit
covered in black spider webs with a spider crawling on it.
And so conceptually, like it's a man made of spiders,
sort of.
That makes a lot of sense actually.
Like when you say Spider-Man
and it's a man just made out of spiders, I get
it.
It's very Halloween.
I think that's a lot more direct than you get bit by a spider.
It like gives you spider DNA somehow and then you shoot spider webs out of your wrists.
Yeah, out of his wrists.
Which really should be more a gland located near your anus, but who's really counting,
I guess?
That's true.
We all know the silk comes out of the back of a spider.
And then Marvel Comics was like, we're not doing that.
It doesn't come out of the anus, it comes out of the spinnerets, but that is located on the posterior of the
spider.
Cool.
Okay.
And you're exactly right.
I feel like the costume company's concept of a spider man is the first idea you would
have.
A man made of spiders is exciting and very Halloween.
I'm thinking kind of like Jeff Goldblum in the fly, like half spider, half man in a gross
way.
Yeah.
DC Comics made Batman, right?
And then later they thought of a guy named Man Bat, who is that the fly kind of thing
where it's a guy who's half bat and like a monster.
Is that really innovative though to go like, well, we have a bat man.
No, it's very lazy.
What about a man bat?
They definitely wanted to go to lunch.
It's like, well, we have mermaids.
What about made mers?
But is fish head Lady Bottom?
Yeah.
And we're pretty sure that the Spider-Man Marvel character was total parallel thinking.
There's debate
about who should get the most credit out of Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko and Stan Lee, but
we think the Spider-Man idea came from inside the building. They didn't steal it from the
Halloween costume.
Yeah, because they were coming up with all sorts of blank men. Batman, Spider-Man, Superman,
Iron Man. Yeah, Aquaman, Cat Boys. No, that later. That was later.
No, that makes sense. I don't think they stole it from this kind of costume company,
especially because the concept is just very different.
And the odd thing is part of why Ben Cooper quickly licensed a costume of it is that they
retrofitted their man-made-of-spiders design to be a Marvel Spider-Man costume.
Instead of a yellow webface costume, they made a red and blue webface costume.
It kind of just worked out neatly.
And also Marvel partly sold it to them because they just didn't know how big Marvel Comics
or Halloween costumes could be as a business.
Right.
Yeah, I mean I guess like were people spending a lot of money on Halloween costumes yet?
Because I know Halloween's been around a good amount of time in America, but it was often the Charlie Brown
Ghost situation where you get a sheet and you toss it on you and you get some holes
cut out at you and you get a bunch of rocks because the adults in this Charlie Brown universe
are really mean.
That's right.
And we'll get to it later, but by the 1960s, people were buying some pop
culture costumes. And we'll talk about why in a takeaway later. Yeah.
Sweet.
And then the next number here, back to the present day, the number is 10.
All right.
Because in 2023, Heidi Klum teamed up with 10 performers from Cirque du Soleil to execute
a peacock costume.
Oh, Heidi. Heidi, listen.
It's amazing.
Listen to me, Heidi. She's definitely an odd bird. Her Halloween costumes, though,
I do really respect it. One time she was just earthworm.
A giant worm. A giant worm.
She had prosthetics on her face that kind of melded in to the rest of her costume.
And she was just big worm.
And she's like in her classic Heidi Klum fashion like,
Oh, you know, I just thought I would be a giant worm, you know.
I do respect these, because she's not just like, I'm going to be a hot earthworm, just
like, I'm going to be a giant abomination.
Isn't it chic?
Yeah, it's very the later books of the Dune franchise, like a creepy humanoid worm thing.
But yeah, I did see, I'm actually aware of this.
I did see this incredible peac worm thing. But yeah, I did see, I'm actually aware of this. I did see this incredible peacock thing.
I love this story for a bunch of reasons.
One is, yes, it is made out of a bunch of people.
So like even, so like you'd think like,
okay, they make up the tail, I get it, I get it.
No, it is Heidi Klum as like the head and neck.
A man she's standing on, like he's a chair, is the feet.
And then a number of other acrobats in the back
are the tail.
There's a number of other limbs that are going around
that I'm not sure what is happening there.
It is fantastic.
Like they, it's great. Exactly right. My absolute
favorite part of the story, Alex, is though what her husband was dressed as. Do you know
this? No. Her husband, like she's like, okay, so I'm a beautiful peacock. Husband, dear,
you are egg. And he was just egg. He was just big egg Which was just him wearing a big egg and his face was painted
I missed egg white and so her husband was just big egg
She's like Bjork, but the Bjork of fashion. I do appreciate how
Insane she is
Yeah, she's really committed to this like she loves Halloween right a whole lot
Really loves Halloween. Maybe not her husband that much because she's like oh
I'm a peacock made out of a myriad of people forming together our bodies where we do not know where peacock ends and human begins
You are egg. You would be egg
He's like well, that's okay. How many acrobats do I get she's like no acrobats upset You're egg. You will be egg.
He's like, well that's okay, how many acrobats do I get? She's like, no acrobats upside down.
None.
No, you're not acrobat here.
You're egg, just to be egg.
What's my motivation?
Egg.
Yeah, it's gonna be really heavy and you're on your own.
Yeah.
Yeah, and they like, when they presented it
on the red carpet of the nightclub
the acrobats formed a shape and then she climbed through them and up on top of them and
It's just wild. She might be the leader of costumes
Yeah, she's standing on this man like he is a chair and you know, yeah, which they're trained for. It's fine
related to celebrities the next number is 118 days.
Is that how long it took for them to make that egg costume for her husband?
Yeah, he was trapped in a laboratory for most of the year.
Right.
Her family's on the beach.
She's like, go into the chamber.
You have to prepare.
Yeah.
You need to learn what it is like to be egg.
So 118 days, that's the length of the 2023 labor strike by the SAG-AFTRA union of film
and TV actors in Hollywood.
Good for them.
118 day strike.
How does this Halloween?
The weirdest effect of it on the actors
is that the strike included Halloween.
It was from mid July until early November.
And they couldn't perform in films or TV,
but also they were required to not promote
their Hollywood projects.
Like a lot of actors who had things come out during the strike just didn't do any press.
And then the New York Times reported on this as it happened, in the run up to Halloween,
SAG-AFTRA leadership warned their members to not wear Halloween costumes involving
intellectual property from major studio productions.
And they said members should quote, celebrate Halloween this year while also staying in
solidarity.
I get it.
You know, it seems kind of like a weird technicality, but I'm following the logic.
And it got mixed responses from members.
On Twitter, actor Ryan Reynolds posted quote, I look forward to screaming scab at my eight-year-old
all night.
She's not in the union, but she needs to learn.
Another union actor named John Rocha said that he felt like it was foolish and not letting
actors blow off steam to handle this difficult labor action.
But other actors complied or even celebrated it and said it wasn't hard to pick
something generic or public domain and the labor action is more important than Instagram posting
your Halloween costume from Alien or Batman or whatever. Either way with this push, it spoke to
how much or little we let pop culture influence our Halloween costumes, especially because next number here is 1.36
billion US dollars with a B.
That's a lot of dollars.
Yeah, 1.36 billion was the worldwide box office gross of the Barbie movie as of early September
2023.
Yeah.
And so not only with it easily being the top movie of the whole year, it
was timed in a way where it became the top Halloween costume of 2023.
I paid $12 into that, however many billion you said it was.
Me too. 1.36 billion. We have a Google results indicating Barbie was the top costume. They
do an annual fright geist survey from Google Trends
based on like searches. Barbie was number one. The rest of the top five were number two princess,
so not pop culture so much. Just princess. I see. Just generic princess. Yeah. And then number
three, Spider-Man. Still a massive costume. Spider-Man just, God, everyone loves the red spandex
and shooting webs out of your hands.
It's just fun.
And then number four, Witch.
Number five, Fairy.
So both relatively public domain.
And then number six was Wednesday Addams.
Yeah, there's a show.
Yeah, and the show came out November 2022.
So it had enough staying power that it made Wednesday
the top Halloween costume 11 months later.
I think I did a Wednesday costume at some point.
This was ages ago, though, so predates the Netflix show.
Yeah, and it's also building on the earlier movies and comics
and having
TV show and everything. And the other interesting number from Fright Geist is
22. 22 was the ranking for a costume of Taylor Swift's. And that was the highest
rank for a costume based on a real individual. Yeah. I remember once I tried
to dress as David Bowie, but I was a college student on
both a time and money budget. So I tried to draw a lightning bolt down my face in red
lipstick. It smeared everywhere. So it just looked like I was trying to play a car accident
victim or something. It didn't really work.
I think I had a lazier college costume, which is I was Arthur Dent from The Hitchhiker's Guy to the
Galaxy. Oh yeah, bathrobe. Exactly. I owned a bathrobe and I owned probably a maximum of two
towels. So I just grabbed one of the towels. You know, you have your towel, like a checkers guy. And nobody knew what I was. Yeah.
Yeah. You're like, I'm Arthur Dent. And they're like, I don't read. What do you mean?
At least one person told me, you just want to be cozy, right? And I was like, yeah, I'm
cozy and lazy. That's correct. Yeah.
I think that's great. I love Halloween costumes that are like my pajamas. I'm a sleepy little
guy. I just want to go to Shreep. Yeah, yeah, I'm gonna hit the hay pretty soon and high. It's late, I ate a
popcorn ball that may or may not have had weed in it, so I'm going to bed.
But yeah, and those are our numbers. We have then a couple of amazing takeaways about a lot of the Halloween costume topics
we discussed.
First one is takeaway number one.
Costumes are one of the newest components in the vague history and timeline of Halloween.
Oh.
So can I guess, this is truly a guess.
I didn't like research this or anything.
Yeah.
Trick or treat may have come from an earlier thing where it's like you'd go
around and either do some minor act of vandalism or receive an apple.
And then like the jack-o-lanterns, bet, were old and maybe wearing a weird mask or something.
That's my guess.
Basically we had pranking before we had the idea of give people candy to not prank you.
Right.
Okay.
And then there were separate developments of harvest festival stuff like Jack-o-lanterns
bonfires pranks, and then a separate trend of costume parties.
And then also as a third thing kind of a candy industry gets going and clomps on to all that.
When did we kind of start celebrating All Hallows Eve in the US? Because it's more of a US holiday,
I thought, or maybe it's also US and Britain.
Commercialized US Halloween gets going in the start of the 1900s, and it's also US and Britain. Commercialized US Halloween gets going in the
start of the 1900s. And it's actually somewhat vague what traditions piled into that. Alhazif
is one of them. And people can find lots of bloggy internet sites that will say,
Halloween is exclusively from Soin or Samhain. I found multiple pronunciations. Samhain or Sowin
or Sammon was a Gaelic festival that proceeded to become a Christian event called All Souls
Day. It was usually around November 1st and there are several, especially European, pagan
and then Christian festivals that we attribute as, that's where Halloween came from.
And that's only sort of true.
It's more of a one of several things that went into a pot
to give us US Halloween.
Okay.
But we started doing that in the early 1900s
and partly also stole from stuff like Dia de los Muertos
and there's not like one traditional route.
There's not like one thing. That makes a lot of
sense. Yeah. Even though some of the internet will tell you that. They'll be like, it's definitely
Druids and that's not really the thing. It's always them Druids. No, but I think that's similar to
modern Christmas, right? Because there's a lot of different traditions and it's not all from Christianity.
It's not all from sort of pagan rituals. It seems to be from a variety of different cultural
events that have been stitched together into something that maximizes our fun that we have.
Yeah, it's a good parallel. Yeah, because Christmas is like German tan and bombs and
Irish and Scottish Yule and a Greek bishop named St. Nicholas. And it's a lot of different
thrown together.
Yep.
I almost put it in the numbers. In 2023, there was a New Jersey school system that both tried
to include Christmas stuff in its winter concert and then also
block Halloween stuff on Christian grounds.
Guys, come on.
And they ended up having to withdraw the blocking of Halloween and say, no, it's really a secular
holiday.
And then also kept the Christmas songs in the Winter Carnival because nobody's actually doing a war on Christmas.
But there is a Christian war on Halloween in some quarters.
Oh, it's happening.
It's happening, Alex.
I'm waging a war on Christmas.
But it's to steal all the presents.
Like a Grinch.
I also like the idea of a war on Christmas in extremely Catholic
Italy. Like, good luck. Oh boy. They'll love it. Man. There are, and it's funny because
like, yeah, there's Christmas, but there are so many saints. My God. There's like a parade outside. I'm like, all right, which saint is it this time?
So yeah, this like amalgamation of all sorts of different traditions.
It helps lead to a US style Halloween.
And one key source here is a book.
It's called, Death Makes a Holiday, A Cultural History of Halloween.
It's by nonfiction writer and movie historian,
David J. Skoll. And he says that there's virtually no records of people dressing in costumes
for Halloween before the 1900s. And we actually have a lot of records of costume parties and
costumed festivals for different parts of the year in Europe and the US. There were carnivals
and parades in the run up to Christian Lent, which you still see in places like New Orleans.
And then there were a couple costumey events around Christmas time. There was a holiday before
Christmas day called Saturnalia, a holiday after Christmas day called Twelfth Night.
They both involved costumes and hijinks.
Skals says also in England, they built up Guy Fawkes Day. So November 5th, there'd be costuming and bonfires and mischief. And that's in the neighborhood of October 31st. So that was an
influence on the very English United States. Can I tell you a quick couple of interesting Italian holidays that kind of
seem similar? One is, this is actually after Christmas. It's done in Naples and maybe other
parts of Southern Italy, but these kids will go around on motorcycles and steal Christmas trees.
I mean, it's after Christmas, so they're stealing them them, but they like, they'll go into like a business.
I saw it.
I saw this happen and I looked it up, like what is going on?
And I looked it up and found this out.
But they went into a store, pulled out the tree.
I think they'd already taken all the ornaments off because they're expecting this.
They know these little, little rapscallions are going to go around.
They steal it.
They're like, go, go, go.
I mean, andiamo, andiamo.
And take the tree to their neighborhood,
and they build a bonfire out of the old Christmas trees.
And it's a competition to see which neighborhood has
the biggest bonfire.
Thus the theft.
Because it's like, OK, we can use all our own trees,
or we can steal them.
And so, yeah, it's just a con.
It's like capture the flag or something.
That's amazing.
Exactly.
I think it's fun.
I've told other Italians about how I think it's fun.
They're like, they're just training these kids
to be criminals.
Ah, well, yeah.
So it's, I guess, controversial.
And there's another Italian holiday,
which is actually on my birthday.
Similar actually to Dia de
Los Muertos. You go to a graveyard, you're bringing flowers or cookies or something,
right? And you're sort of honoring the dead, but it's not necessarily a sad day. It's actually
basically Dia de Los Muertos, but Italian. Anyways.
That makes sense.
I'm in Italy, so I'm learning how to steal trees.
And Europe broadly influenced Dia de los Muertos.
Like, this is all kind of a set of things
touching on each other.
We're just a big old bunch of people
mashing our cultures together, and I think it's great.
Like, as soon as it's December 27th or so,
we should start stealing Christmas trees.
That's great, because we're done.
We did it.
Yeah. We did it. I don't think it start stealing Christmas trees. That's great. Cause we're done. We did it. Yeah.
Yeah. Awesome.
We did it.
I don't think it's disrespectful at all.
It's fun.
It seems helpful to me.
Like, you know.
Yeah, I get it.
It's a chore in New York city actually.
Although they were very organized.
It was such an organized break-in that I do understand the concern of like,
we're training these children how to basically like ransack
a store, but it's just Christmas trees.
They'll grow up to be Danny Ocean from the Ocean franchise.
Oh no.
Danny Ocean.
Danny Ocean 11.
So like carving up gourds like pumpkins is from some of the old harvest festivals.
Bonfires are from tons of harvest festivals and pranks are just sort of a
it's getting darker earlier kind of thing in a lot of cultures.
But see, I have all this costuming happens separately from late October.
OK, so we just kind of smushed them together at some point.
How did that happen?
Yeah, so the other key smush element is New York City.
And specifically around the 1880s or so, there's adult men's clubs in New York City where adults
dress in costumes and hold parades that they call fantasticals. But they did this to celebrate
Thanksgiving. Sorry, fantasticals. Good job, fellas.
It's very musical theater.
It's a little bit Marvel Comics, too, but anyway.
Yeah, that's fun.
Man, I miss the times when men weren't afraid to be men
and dress up and celebrate fantasticals and wear cravats.
Right, this even is a little bit influenced
by masquerade balls, you know, like masking.
Like it's all tights and dancing, yeah.
All right, so we had fantasticals.
So men, I guess ladies didn't get to dress up as anything because we were too busy like
churning butter or something.
Yeah, Skal's book also says that Anne Innovator in this was Queen Victoria and that she started
throwing lavish costume balls when she
was queen. So 1800s, like after the beginning of the 1800s. That's surprising to me because like
Victoria, I thought her whole deal was nobody gets to have fun. Yeah, that's both true and overstated.
The Victorian era was like buttoned up and lascivious and it's a good time. I think we talked about it with the Fig Leaf, Fig's episode.
People can check it out.
Oh yeah, that's right.
Basically New York City and the rest of the Eastern United States proceeds to invent Halloween.
Sweet.
One factor is paper products companies looking for an extra angle. In 1912, a paper product maker in Framingham,
Massachusetts started offering a free booklet with instructions for turning their products
into simple costumes for costume parties. Not necessarily Halloween even, just like
people throw costume parties three or four times a year and here's stuff you can make.
So what do you mean by like turning their products into costumes? Like either masks or a very simple smack kind of thing. I see so they
would be like... They made like crepe paper and stuff you know you can turn it into
I see what we would consider a very rudimentary Halloween costume. Well you
know I find those sort of charming I love those old pictures of kids and like
what would what would
it be like 40s or 50s with a bunch of like weird paper rabbit heads and you're like, it's a cult.
It's a candy cult. Because also the other companies getting out and this is candy companies,
apparently children, especially in the Irish neighborhoods of New York City, really ramped up their fall
pranking and tied it in somewhat to All Hallows Eve and All Souls Day.
It's like a tree grows in Brooklyn.
Exactly. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith documents this in the 1910s, that kids
are seeking candy and wearing costumes around the very beginning of doing
that. But she documents it being a Thanksgiving thing. Kids start developing a lot of the
parts of Halloween, but around Thanksgiving. And there's also these fantasticals dancing
and costuming at Thanksgiving. And then in 1924, Macy's department store organized a
New York City Thanksgiving Day parade, partly to steal
the fantasticals thing. They were like, oh, this is a thing people do for fun. We can
commercialize it and promote Macy's department store.
I see.
The New York City amalgamation of a lot of dancing in costumes and pranks and also candy
companies saying, you can use candy to bribe kids to not do this to you.
Like apparently in 1920 a Portland, Oregon candy company started producing jelly beans that were labeled as like a solution to kids pranking you.
Like you can give them a treat instead of their tricks.
That was marketing, right? Like not tongue in cheek, I'm guessing.
It's sort of like most phenomena that kids do.
It's fine and some people are worried, and that's how the pranks were.
It was broadly fine and some people were like, no, this is training them to be Danny Ocean
and bad.
It's like the same thing, yes.
The kids stealing trees and naples. So like, what were generally the nature of the pranks?
Was it like, I will burn down your home
unless you fill me full of sugar?
Or was it stuff like, I put bananas in your mailbox?
It was kind of all of it and sometimes it went too far,
which kind of fits Halloween costumes and pranks to this day.
Like some people do it weird and bad
and some people do it fun.
Yeah.
Yeah, don't egg people's houses.
Don't toilet paper people's houses.
It's a waste of toilet paper.
I do feel like the trauma of the pandemic
when we all ran out of toilet paper
should like teach children like,
toilet paper is actually very useful
and wasting it is like really bad.
We could do a toilet paper episode sometime.
Anyway.
We should.
We really should.
Why haven't we?
It would be really good.
Yeah.
Maybe people are concerned I don't want to talk about poop,
but I would talk about poop.
It's great.
Let's talk about toilet paper in one episode
and then poop in another episode.
It might be too fast actually.
Guys, if you guys have an appetite for poop, if you guys have an appetite for a poop episode,
come on over to my show Creature Feature where I don't share the same sort of like table
manners as Alex.
And also, I edit this show, we could do another phrasing on if you have an appetite for poop.
We're not going to. Moving forward. Yeah. And so there's no one inventor or cultural landmark,
but just the Macy's taking over some Thanksgiving costuming, kids doing pranks, candy as a solution
to it. That all sort of aes around the 1930s into, hey,
there's a less famous fall holiday around October 31st. What if we do this combination
then? There's a brief pause because of sugar rationing in World War II. And then also that
pushes this all of a sudden. Immediately after sugar rationing ends, candy makers promote
the idea of candy Halloween events.
And that's the broad set of things that generated US Halloween.
Yeah, like that makes a lot of sense. Like if you don't have access to candy for a few years and then it's like candy's back on the menu boys, that's got to be exciting.
Yeah, and so costuming is kind of a late breaking addition of this. It was one of the last steps was,
hey, this thing that some men in New York City are doing at Thanksgiving and that we do at other
holidays, let's wear costumes for the fall harvest other parts. That was sort of one of the last
steps. Okay. I mean, that makes sense. Again, so many holidays are really just like, yes, some of
them are deeply, deeply religious. I understand that, but a lot of holidays are really just like, yes, some of them are deeply, deeply religious.
I understand that.
But a lot of holidays and stuff is like, we just want a little bit of fun.
We want to dress as Shrek and eat a bunch of nerds ropes.
Yeah, and folks, that's a ton of numbers and a takeaway.
We are going to come back with another takeaway about a costume danger and a last takeaway
about why pop culture costumes are a thing at all.
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And we are back and we have another takeaway about the roots of Halloween costumes.
But before that, there's a thing for right now.
It's a big thing to think about, which is takeaway number two.
Halloween costumes weirdly highlight the lack of pedestrian safety in the United States.
Oh, this is really interesting.
Okay.
Yeah, I have a lot of strong opinions about this, but do go on, Alex.
It's relatively quick because it's straightforward.
Halloween is the biggest night of the year for a year round US problem. Key source here is an
amazing piece for Vox.com in 2022 by Muiz Oktar. And again, US style Halloween, it only really
takes off after World War II. A lot of it originated in New York City, which is far
more walkable than the rest of the country. For those reasons and more, the United States
is not laid out for trick-or-treating. It's not a laid out for a lot of things.
Right. And then the additional problem is that a lot of Halloween costumes, ghouls,
Batman, it's a lot of dark fabric you're hiding.
They're spooky.
And spooky is like, you know, shadowy and hiding inside, you know, dark alleys and stuff.
So yeah, a lot of black, a lot of, you know, dark colors that are, you know, not so visible.
Exactly.
And so pedestrians under the age of 18 in the US are three times more likely
to be killed by a car on Halloween than any other day of the year. And a 2019 study in
JAMA Pediatrics found that children ages four through eight, that's 10 times more likely.
Can we just ban cars that day? Like, my God. I'm serious. I'm not even joking. I think,
I really hate cars. I've driven, I have my driver's license. I drive a car all the time.
I actually have no problem with people like enjoying cars as like a hobby, right? Like
I really like classic cars and so on. It's nuts that kids can't walk around for one night
to get their candy and misuse toilet paper
and not worry about these cars.
It seems like they should just shut down a lot of roads
on Halloween and be like,
all right, cars aren't going through here.
Yes, we'll keep main roads open,
but if there's a residential area, your car's not, sorry,
cars aren't going, or like some sort of like
very, very low speed limit.
Yeah, and the good news specific to Halloween
is that we are doing a lot short of that suggestion
from Katie to rectify this.
That suggestion from Katie is a great idea.
A lot of times parents accompany kids.
That's true.
A lot of times parents accompany kids and any group can make sure at least one element
is brightly colored and highly visible.
You can still dress as Batman.
You just need a bag or a friend or something that's easy to see.
Reflective Tape Man, the safest costume you can wear.
Kind of, yeah.
Like if your parents wears one of those yellow vests, you can be whatever you want and just
stay near him.
Right.
Batman and his sidekick.
Glow in the dark, please don't run over my child, lady.
Like we retire the character of Robin and it's like
Canary or Macaw or just a brighter bird. Robin is actually, he's got the green and the red and
the yellow. He's pretty bright. Just make him, oh, if you make him Lego, Lego Robin, right? He's got
the like glittery shiny outfit. Like that'd work. Yeah. 1960s Robin, very bright. Yeah, you know.
Yeah.
And it's even good that the main main Halloween color
is like safety orange, you know?
Great, cool.
Yes, pumpkins, that's right.
The real problem is not even so much Halloween.
It's that it turns out the US
is just not safe for pedestrians.
Year round, the number one cause of childhood fatalities
in the US is guns, but number two
is motor vehicles. And so Halloween just makes it obvious. And then the rest of the year,
it's also going on and with the kids just living their life.
Yeah. And also just car design too. We need to limit the size of non-commercial vehicles, in my opinion. Have you seen those images of newer trucks where you see a child next to a truck and
you just see it's impossible.
It would be impossible to see that kid unless they're 20 feet away.
Yeah.
So you're saying there's at most one problem with the Cybertruck.
That's interesting.
That's cool.
Oh yeah, that's weird.
I didn't write a video about that or anything.
It's so good.
I'm going to link the episode of Somewhere News.
Katie, you're right.
I'm going to talk about Cybertruck.
And I'll link, I wrote a 1-900 hot dog column about a very dumb children's book promoting
the Cybertruck.
It's a bad vehicle.
We don't like.
There's a, are you, Alex, are you serious?
There's a children's book promoting it
or is this like a joke?
It's called The Ugly Truckling
and it's about the concept that cyber trucks
are too demonized for their shape
by people who are like body shaming it.
Wait, no, is this a real book?
Yeah, it's real.
Alex, it's a serious book, who wrote it?
Unfortunately, a a dumb STEM educator who also might be a Scientologist. We're not sure.
But yeah.
Oh, that makes a lot of sense.
So we have a lot to link.
That's incredible. Okay, I got to check that out. I didn't know you did that. That's amazing. Totally different costume topic.
And kind of a little more costume history.
The end of the main episode is takeaway number three.
Two companies built up the US Halloween costume industry and they came at it from very hilarious
weird origins. Okay.
Both of them didn't really seem to be planning on being Halloween costume companies.
What were they planning on being? Like haute couture? I can't say that. Haute couture?
One of them started out in mostly vaudeville and European style masquerquerades and the other was a flag company.
Okay, so like Venetian masks and then a flag company? Okay.
Yeah, we'll talk about each of them. And the first one that came up with the Spider-Man
story, it's called Ben Cooper Incorporated. Okay.
They did that first Spider-Man costume all around.
The company's just named Ben Cooper Incorporated?
Yeah, and I couldn't find a reason that a company founded by the brothers Ben Cooper
and Nat Cooper is called Ben Cooper.
I don't know why Nat is not in the name.
Aw, Nat's the younger brother.
Yeah, and Key Source here is an amazing piece for Thrillist.com by Charles Moss, who
also wrote for Slade about something else here.
He says that Ben Cooper, Inc. basically invented plastic or vinyl mask with two eye holes and
a string around the back for Halloween.
Man, did he invent how they smell as well?
Because they have a very distinctive smell.
It's the material, yeah. Ben Cooper Incorporated invents that and basically invents pop culture
costumes and breaking trends costumes because they start out in the 1920s making masquerade
ball masks and making props for vaudeville, which was on its last legs but still going.
And so they're in New York City to do this. In the late 1930s, they break into Halloween
costumes with one world changing deal. They score a licensing deal to make costumes of
the Snow White character from the relatively new entertainment company run by Walt Disney.
And this changes Halloween completely.
Yeah.
Was it just Snow White or were there other ones?
Was it like, because I thought maybe they had some dwarf masks as well or was it just
Snow White?
They start there and immediately do everything else.
Okay.
They're so ahead of the game.
They make this deal in 1937.
And that's technically the premiere date of Snow White, but other than a Hollywood premiere,
it isn't in theaters till 1938.
They make a bet on this will be huge before people are seeing it.
And this is sort of what The Simpsons references to, right?
Because you have a mask of a character, like a Hanna-Barbera
character, Batman, Marvel. You sent me a photo that has a Rubik's cube, which is insane.
That it's like my face is a Rubik's cube with like eye holes and like it looks like a silly
little mouth. The like Simpsons joke where it's like the mask and then you have the smock
with a little little character on the smock as well.
It's a Ben Cooper joke. Yeah. That was the two things they did.
Yeah. They did like the plastic masks and then the smock that has like another picture
of the character just in case you missed the mask as well.
And that was a huge hit and it becomes Ben Cooper's business. As soon as the 1960s, they hold
about 70% of the US Halloween costume market share. They invented and dominate it. Their
business model is to make a licensing deal as early as possible in a pop culture thing,
mostly because they needed eight to ten months
to set up production lines and logistics for each new costume. So they're just like jumping
on things before they're even out yet. And they make them cheap. The mask or smock type
garment sells for less than three dollars in 1950s money, which is around 12 bucks today.
It's cheap.
I have now zoomed in on this picture that you sent me and there's a wild one. Looks
like maybe garbage pail kid. That used to be sort of a thing and it's like a baby covered
in spiders. And then there's a man with a noose around his neck and he's making like
a face.
Yeah, they just did everything. And it's that very
mid-century thing of like, your entire costume could just be this mask and then you're in person
clothes. You know, it's very idyllic to me. And then there's a Batman like classic sort of
thirties Batman. And then there's man with a bat over his eyes, which I find interesting.
Right.
And they pretty much invent the pop culture costume.
That Spider-Man story we said before, that's why they were on the ball like, oh, Marvel,
you just invented a Spider-Man.
We'll make a costume.
Great.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
And they were also one of the first Star Wars things you could get.
There's a very famous Kenner company toy deal with Star Wars.
And one of my sources said that Kenner was so behind on how big Star Wars got that at
Christmas some people were buying like a coupon for a future action figure from Kenner.
But Ben Cooper was ahead of that.
They were telling their factory to make Darth
Vader masks when none of the employees knew what Darth Vader was. They were like, I don't
know, this is the mold we got. I wonder what this will be.
It's pretty smart too, right? Because that's such an iconic thing, right? You're not just
doing like, here's Luke's face because he's the protagonist. It's like no you got to do the villain because he's got the most distinctive face and the cool thing about a mask for a face looks like how
it would look like if you're a kid wearing masks so it feels more real like I am Darth Vader because
I have a mask just like Darth Vader. Yeah anyone can look like Darth Vader. Anyone can look like Darth Vader. Ben Cooper blows up from this. They only really
start to decline in recent decades when people want a more upscale costume. Otherwise, they're
huge and we're a real leader. The other leader has an even funnier origin to me because
Collegeville Manufacturing is a company that follows Ben
Cooper's lead and they also end up battling them for some of the Universal Studios monster
movie IP and making some headway that way.
So Ben Cooper had competitors as soon as they came up with their idea.
But Collegeville Manufacturing started out as a flag company that was the side hustle
of a dentist.
What?
Like a dentist said, I think I can make extra money founding a flag company, but still being
a dentist day to day.
Okay.
How did he make that little connection?
The main source here is the libraries of Ursinus College, which is near Collegeville, Pennsylvania.
Nobody has exactly why this was his side hustle idea, but all we know is in 1909, dentist
Samuel Cornish just learns that there is a burgeoning market for flags, especially American
flags.
It's almost like somebody deciding to start an Etsy store to make stickers today.
Like, oh, I just heard on TikTok there's a sticker business, you know?
I mean, I guess I like to crochet, so if you're a dentist, you might like to start a flag
empire.
He sets up a tiny Collegeville flag company in one room of a building in Collegeville,
Pennsylvania, still is a full-time dentist for the next 15 years. He doesn't actively
mainly be a flag factory owner until 1924. But it's because it very slowly grew to the
point that over 15 years of incremental tiny growth in making American flags, he said,
okay, I guess I should focus on this.
I see. So he hedged his bets in case we lived in a future
where everyone was really patriotic, but nobody had teeth.
Wow, that is true. Both his businesses are filling a definite eternal need,
unless there's no longer a United States and society.
It's like, look, we don't know. I mean, the thing is, my guy, if there's no longer a United States because of nuclear war, I don't know if people are going to need
a dentist. Right. We'll be breaking teeth in the wastelands.
Yeah. Teeth will be currency for sure. Right. Yeah, that and bottle caps look and
fall out. Yeah. And so two accidents spark the conversion of Collegeville Flag Company into a
costume company. One is just the calendar of US holidays. In the 1930s, their business notices
that their main busy season is May and the holiday that we now call Memorial Day. And so they said,
oh, hey, like Halloween's the opposite end of the year. We could do like other stuff then. And the other thing is one very specific order. According
to the Norristown Times Herald newspaper, one of the main Collegeville flag vendors
asked for like a special order of masquerade ball costumes and specifically the clown-ish
type, you know? The Collegeville flag company says, this is a very important client, how do we make them
clown costumes really fast?
So then they took scraps and remnants of discarded American flags and turned them into red, white
and blue clown costumes.
That is incredible.
I love how many flag codes that has to break.
That's wonderful.
It's a very funny day at the flag factory.
Yeah. God bless America. They did that and then that was in the back of their minds
when Halloween really gets going and they say we're pivoting from Collegeville
flag company to Collegeville manufacturing company and there is a
Halloween story in Collegeville Pennsylvania to this day with origins in the company. Apparently it doesn't really have heating or AC and has
very rudimentary plumbing because it's that old. And this is one of the two companies that
kind of founded the holiday.
It sounds terrible.
Yeah. And they don't spend a lot of time in the building, I don't think.
But
Okay. I'm just like one of these poor poor people sewing, shredding American flags so they can sew all
these clown costumes while sweating heavily and having backed up toilets.
That sounds like a nightmare.
Yeah, I think it was an average American factory in the 1920s.
So that's how it is.
Okay, all right.
Well, yeah.
Usa, Usa, Usa.
Usa, Usa, usa, usa.
Usa, usa.
And happy Halloween.
Hey folks, that's the main episode for this week.
Welcome to the outro with fun features for you such as help remembering this episode
with a run back through the big takeaways.
Takeaway number one, costumes are one of the newest components in the vague history of
Halloween.
Takeaway number two, Halloween costumes highlight the lack of pedestrian safety in the United
States.
Takeaway number three, two companies built the US Halloween costume industry and came
at it from hilarious and accidental origins.
And then so many numbers about costumes for pets, the most popular costumes, the parallel invention of Spider-Man costumes,
and more.
Those are the takeaways, and I said that's the main episode because there's more secretly
incredibly fascinating stuff available to you right now if you support this show at
MaxBumFund.org.
Members are the reason this podcast exists, so members get a bonus show every week where
we explore one obviously incredibly fascinating story related to the main episode.
This week's bonus topic is about the most obscure and US government-based issue of a
racist Halloween costume.
There's a million stories of those in general, this one's surprisingly relevant to the Bush
administration. Visit sifpod.fund for that bonus show, for a library of 18 dozen other secretly incredibly
fascinating bonus shows, and a catalog of all sorts of Max Fund bonus shows.
It's special audio, it's just for members.
Thank you to everybody who backs this podcast operation.
Additional fun things, check out our research sources on this episode's page at MaximumFun.org.
Key sources this week include an amazing book, it's called Death Makes a Holiday, a Cultural
History of Halloween, that is by nonfiction writer and movie historian David J. Skal,
also citing work from J. Storr-Dailey, written by Lynn Brown, also leaned on the digital
collections of Ursinus College
in Pennsylvania, and then tons of journalism from the New York Times, NPR, Vox.com, Variety,
and more.
That page also features resources such as native-land.ca, I'm using those to acknowledge
that I recorded this in Lenapehoking, the traditional land of the Munsee Lenape people
and the Wapinger people, as well as the Mohican people, Skategoat people, and others.
Also KD taped this in the country of Italy, and I want to acknowledge that in my location,
in many other locations in the Americas and elsewhere, Native people are very much still
here.
That feels worth doing on each episode, and join the free CIF Discord where we're sharing
stories and resources about native people and life.
There is a link in this episode's description to join that Discord.
We're also talking about this episode on the Discord, and hey, would you like a tip on another episode?
Because each week I'm finding is something randomly incredibly fascinating by running all the past episode numbers through a random number generator.
This week's pick is episode
101. That's about the topic of stainless steel. And this is a fun fact that I also
made a recent TikTok about on an Instagram reel video about Margaret Atwood recently
used a flamethrower to attack a copy of The Handmaid's Tale, but it was for charity because
it's an unburnable copy bound with the stainless steel used by the aerospace industry.
That is also a tiny fragment of that episode, so I highly recommend it.
I also recommend my co-host Katie Goldin's weekly podcast, Creature Feature, about animals,
science, and more.
Our theme music is Unbroken, Unhaven by the BUDOS Band.
Our show logo is by artist Burton Durand.
Special thanks to Chris Souza for audio mastering on this episode.
Special thanks to The Beacon Music Factory for taping support. Extra extra special thanks
go to our members. Thank you to all our listeners. I'm thrilled to say we will be back next
week with more secretly incredibly fascinating. So how about that? Talk to you then