Something You Should Know - How the LIKE Button Changed the World & Weird Things Your Body Does
Episode Date: May 5, 2025Why is salmon pink? What is the shelf life of a Twinkie? What do almonds and peaches have in common? These are just a few of the fun food facts we cover to kick off this episode. https://www.huffpost....com/entry/food-facts_n_4788746 How many times would you guess the “Like” button is pressed by people every day around the world? You are about to find out and it is a lot! Where did the like button come from? Why is it so important? What does it do for the person who does the liking and for the person (or business) who gets your “like”? Listen to my guest Martin Reeves, who has explored the history of the like button and why it has become such a big part of our lives. Martin is chairman of the BCG Henderson Institute, a think tank for developing new business ideas and he is co-author of the book Like: The Button That Changed the World (https://amzn.to/4cTgCUn). What is going on right now in your body is astonishing. Things like tears and your breath and even mucus. It is all fascinating and worth understanding. (And I promise we do not get really gross!) Joining me for this discussion is Cutter Wood, who has thoroughly explored and researched this topic and written a book called Earthly Materials: Journeys Through Our Bodies' Emissions, Excretions, and Disintegrations (https://amzn.to/4lPEJHw) You have likely had the dilemma of owning a favorite pair of shoes that need to be repaired and the question is – do you fix them or just get a new pair? Listen as I reveal what the experts say that determines the answer to that question. https://www.businessinsider.com/should-i-repair-or-replace-my-shoes-2015-4 PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! FACTOR: Eat smart with Factor! Get 50% off at https://FactorMeals.com/something50off TIMELINE: Get 10% off your order of Mitopure! Go to https://Timeline.com/SOMETHING INDEED: Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING right now! QUINCE: Elevate your shopping with Quince! Go to https://Quince.com/sysk for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns! SHOPIFY: Nobody does selling better than Shopify! Sign up for a $1 per-month trial period at https://Shopify.com/sysk and upgrade your selling today! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Amy Nicholson, the film critic for the LA Times.
And I'm Paul Scheer, an actor, writer, and director.
You might know me from The League, Veep,
or my non-eligible for Academy Award role in Twisters.
We come together to host Unspooled,
a podcast where we talk about good movies, critical hits,
fan favorites, must-sees, and in case you missed them.
We're talking Parasite, The Home Alone.
From Grease to The Dark Knight.
So if you love movies like we do,
come along on our cinematic adventure. Listen to Unspooled wherever you get your podcasts. And don't forget to hit the dark night. So if you love movies like we do, come along on our cinematic adventure. Listen to unspooled wherever you get your podcasts and don't forget to hit the follow button.
Today on something you should know, fascinating facts about the food you eat, like why salmon is
pink, what's the shelf life of a Twinkie and more? Then, the like button.
It's pressed billions of times a day.
Why do we like the like button?
When you click the picture of the like button,
it creates dopamine release,
and it's the same dopamine release as actually being liked.
It's the same dopamine release as actually liking somebody.
Also, the rule about when to repair a pair of shoes
or just get new ones.
And amazing things about your body you never knew,
about your breath, your tears, even your mucus.
Mucus is one of the most important things,
if not the most important thing that your body produces.
It blinds the nose, the mouth, the eyes, the lungs,
the entire digestive tract.
All told, your body's making like a gallon
of mucus a day, basically.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
I'm Anne Foster, host of the feminist women's
history comedy podcast, Vulgar History.
And every week I share the saga of a woman from history
whose story you probably didn't already know
and you will never forget after you hear it.
Sometimes we reexamine well known people like Cleopatra or Pocahontas sharing the truth behind their legends.
Sometimes we look at the scandalous women you'll never find in a history textbook.
If you can hear my cat purring, she is often on the podcast as well.
Listen to Vulgar History wherever you get your podcasts. of a Twinkie. It actually has one and it's not as long as you think.
Hi and welcome to this episode of Something You Should Know.
There are a lot of facts about many of the foods we eat that are pretty interesting and
worth knowing.
For example, Twinkies really do have a shelf life and it is about 45 days.
Most of the salmon we eat is dyed pink. Wild salmon are pink in color
because they eat these little crustaceans called krill that give the
salmon that pink color, but farmed salmon, which accounts for about two-thirds of
the salmon we eat, are fed pellets to dye their flesh pink, which is otherwise
naturally gray.
An ear of corn will almost always have an even number of rows.
Honey, and you've probably heard this before, but honey does not have a shelf life.
It can crystallize and it can change color, but it never goes bad.
Avocados, pumpkins, bananas, and watermelon are actually all berries and strawberries are
not really berries. Almonds are part of the peach family. And here's something
kind of gross. What's in your peanut butter may shock you. According to the
FDA there can be up to an average of 30 or more insect fragments per 100 grams of peanut butter
and an average of one or more rodent hairs per 100 grams of peanut butter.
And finally, the average American eats about one ton of food per year and that
is something you should know.
How many times have you pressed the like button when you like a post or a video or a product or whatever else? There's often a like button right there and the temptation is to press it. Why?
What is it about the like button that we like so much and what does pressing it do? What is it about the like button that we like so much? And what does pressing it do? What does it do for us? What does it do for the
person who gets the likes?
And where did the idea for the like button come from?
Listen to this. Supposedly
the like button is pressed over 7 billion times a day.
That's almost as many times per day as there are people
on the planet. The like button has become part of our lives or certainly our
online lives and here to talk about it is Martin Reeves. He's chairman of the BCG
Henderson Institute which is a think tank for developing new ideas in
business. He's co-author of the book, Like, the Button
that Changed the World.
Hi, Martin.
Thanks for coming on Something You Should Know.
Thanks for having me, Mike.
So when and where did the Like button first appear?
Oh, well, that's a really interesting thing.
It's hard to say.
We might popularly believe that it's Facebook,
because they, of course,
pioneered the spread of the like button and used it as a central feature of their business model,
but it certainly wasn't them. And the guy that I co-authored the book with, Bob Goodson,
he was the first employee of Yelp. And he's one of the contenders. I mean,
he has a dated sketch of the like button
that precedes Facebook's adoption by many years.
Well, that's a bit surprising,
just because the like button doesn't seem like it's that old
and seems like a relatively simple thing that caught on
that you could find the origins of it pretty clearly.
You know, it turns out that innovation,
in the case of the like button,
and in the case of other inventions,
turns out to be messy, serendipitous, social,
many forgotten heroes, many delays,
and the eventual use of the thing actually turns out to be
often quite different from the initial intention. Of of course the huge economic impact of the of the light button was that enabled social media to become a business because by being a feedback loop from users it could.
Enable facebook to say to advertisers hey we can tell you which part of your advertising is working which part isn't you know that's where all where all the money was. That was absolutely not the problem that people were trying to solve with the early like button.
They were trying to encourage user reviews for restaurants that they couldn't afford
to pay for without triggering a page refresh.
If you remember the days of the page refresh, if you clicked any button on your computer,
you'd have a 20 second delay while the page refreshed.
So it had to be done within the browser.
That was the problem that people were trying to solve, and they accidentally solved a
much bigger problem.
So when you look back, since you have probably looked at this better and more deeply than
anyone, was somebody trying to create the like button, or was somebody trying to come
up with a way to just solve that refresh problem, or was somebody trying to come up with a way to just solve that refresh problem or was somebody trying to,
what were they trying to do that resulted in the like button?
Yeah. Well, you know,
we did personally interview all of these people that were part of that community
of people trying to do things with a instant recognition icon.
And they were, they often didn't have any awareness that they were doing anything special.
I mean, every day consisted for these startups, and this is after the dot com crash.
So it was the nuclear winter in Silicon Valley.
These companies that were struggling to survive, were just trying to solve another tactical problem.
And there were various tactical problems at the time.
So one of them was voting.
How could you do voting?
For instance, I'm not sure if they remember a site
called Hot or Not.
It was, you know, you voted on people's photographs.
Were they hot or not?
And so you needed some sort of voting mechanism
that aggregated clicks,
but you needed not to trigger a page refresh.
So that's one job that, tactical job
that people are trying to solve for.
There's the one I mentioned about, hey,
we're a restaurant review site.
We need to attract restaurant reviews.
How do we do that?
How do we give people incentive?
We don't have the money to pay for these things,
like the Michelin guide would.
So how do we do that?
Another one was cleaning up content feeds.
Most people, if you give them an opportunity
to comment on somebody else's content,
they'll make a trivial comment.
They'll say, OK, you're great, or well done.
And if you've got a whole page full of that,
that's not very captivating.
That's not going to keep users on your site.
So if you can clean all of that and compress it
into an icon with a little counter or something, that's another problem. And so people are trying to solve these various tactical problems. And then
then they bumped into the idea that, hey, you know, there's this perpetual problem since the
beginning of time in advertising, which is half my advertising, as the joke goes, is ineffective.
I just don't know which half of my advertising is ineffective.
And by enabling this sort of instant low cost response
function, I like that.
I like that person.
I like that content.
Essentially, you had the first effective granular proof
of the value of advertising, which
was the lifeblood of social media becoming a multi-billion
business and the thing that
turned the digital marketing and advertising industry upside down. But that was not the
original intention. So it's literally the strict definition of serendipity. If serendipity is
a search for X and actually bumping into Y, it was essentially serendipitous.
So the like button isn't a thing in the sense
that there's a patent, there's a patent owner,
there's a diagram of how it works.
The like button is more of a concept, isn't it?
Well, the like button, it looks like giving somebody
a thumbs up symbol.
And of course, that's not an accident.
There was a very popular book amongst web designers
at the time called Don't Make Me Think. And the idea of this book was that if you wanted ideas to travel
and scale, you didn't want the innovative thing to look innovative, to look unfamiliar,
complicated, clever, because things that make you think, things with unnecessary friction
involved, you know, hard work. You want to hijack something that's already there and why the thumb, you know,
why the thumbs up icon?
Well, it was a gesture that already existed in human language.
It's not actually a thumbs up.
It's a piece of code in JavaScript that, you know, with a visual
appearance of a, of a thumbs up.
But there is something, there's something about the like
button that touches a nerve or something.
If it's pressed seven billion times a day,
there's something pretty magical about it.
What is it that makes it so effective?
When you click the picture and the piece of code
of the like button, it creates dopamine release in the part of the
brain called the nucleus accumbens in the reptilian part of the brain and releases dopamine.
And it's the same dopamine release as actually being liked. It's the same dopamine release as
actually liking somebody. It's as rewarding to like something and somebody has to be liked.
It's the same brain center
that causes us to find sex pleasurable.
Unfortunately, it's the same brain center
that makes cocaine addictive.
So why did we never need an instruction book
for the like button?
Because it's plugging into something
that very cleverly that already exists.
But nobody owns the like button, which is interesting because you would think that because
it is so powerful that someone would lay claim to it that they would say, I invented the
like button, but nobody did. Why didn't they?
Because the culture of Silicon Valley at the time, and still somewhat the case, but maybe
less the case, you know, when you have conversations with these people that were involved in, you know,
a version of the light button, you know, they were all talk talking about each other's work in
restaurants and bars. And there were meetups and there's a famous one called a squid labs, for
example, that it was a place where people gathered and talked about the latest cool stuff they're working on.
So attribution is very difficult.
What's interesting to me about the like button, which is the thumbs up sign, typically, that
most of the time is not a thumbs down sign, right?
You either like it or you stay silent.
I think YouTube has the thumbs up and the thumbs down.
Thumbs down was obviously everybody that contemplated the thumbs up also contemplated
the thumbs down and that would have also been piggybacking on the history of human
gestural language. But the way that the business model of social media evolved,
the advertisers pay for your attention using the
proposition that using their streams of like data and so on, they can tell you whether
your advertising is working, whether it's going to work or not with a particular demographic,
they can target very precisely.
And if that's the case, you want to maximize the continuity of the attention of your users.
So giving people the ability to say, you know,
I don't like this. I don't want to do this. It just doesn't fit with that, with that business
model. So the, the thumbs down button still exists in one or two places, but it died off
pretty quickly. It was, it was positive attention that people, that people wanted.
A lot of companies though, now, certainly Amazon and others,
have a star system that it isn't,
I like it or I don't like it.
It's I like it a little bit or I like it a lot
or I don't like it at all.
Right, I mean, there was never complete convergence
as we've already discussed.
I mean, some companies use, you know,
the heart icon or a smiley icon.
There was never complete convergence, the star system.
One of the interesting things about the like button
is that it's intrinsically ambiguous and usable
as humans use language in all sorts of ways
so it can be gamed.
And also each company is trying to solve a different problem so we take amazon i mean what are the things that amazon is trying to do is.
Is trying to figure out which products to promote which products not promote and also to seem like a trustworthy place to buy things and one of the ways that they had a doing that that was to try to figure out a way of having reliable ratings so they they have their star rating system. And then they also,
I believe they're backing away from this now, but they had their rater rating system. So you
not only rated products, but you rated the raters and you had authorized purchases and it's done
with stars. So that's a very different thing from trying to encourage restaurant reviews or
cleanup content feeds. And they happen to go with the style system, yes.
We're talking about the like button
and what happens when you press it.
My guest is Martin Reeves.
He is author of the book,
Like the Button That Changed the World.
The following was recorded from inside an ice plunge.
Ah, woo!
Okay, all right.
When a core's light is cold enough,
the mountains on the can turn blue.
So the next time you want a cold lager, cold filter,
cold package, core's light, just wait until those glorious
mountains on the can turn blue.
Woo!
It's easy to say that fast when you're freezing gold.
Spring is here and you can now get almost anything you need
delivered with Uber Eats.
What do we mean by almost?
You can't get a well-groomed lawn delivered,
but you can get chicken Parmesan delivered.
Sunshine? No.
Some wine? Yes.
Get almost, almost anything delivered with Uber Eats.
Order now.
Alcohol in select markets.
See after details.
So Martin, I'm thinking of those times
when I'm thinking about pressing the like button.
If I'm going to press the like button
and no one's liked this thing before, I'm less likely to be,
I don't want to be the first.
Like there's a hesitation like, well,
no one's liked it before me.
Why would I like it now?
But if there are 5,000 likes, yeah, sure, I'll pile on.
Well, that goes back to what you might call the evolutionary
suite of human social behaviors.
So how do humans deploy their superpower of social learning?
One way is that they have a preference for what the scientists
call homophily, which is essentially hanging out
with people like me.
Why?
Because I'm more likely to learn from a community that's
like me learning about the same problem than people
that are not like me.
So and interestingly, we use the word like to describe that.
And there's this ambiguity in like.
Like means I like the person.
It also means I am like the person.
It's an act of homophily.
And a second one is, which comes to your point,
is a preference for what you might call mild hierarchy.
So in the animal kingdom, we have hierarchy.
Nobody likes to upset the chief baboon or the chief orangutan. Why? Because they use
violence or the threat of violence, violence to maintain the social hierarchy. Humans are a little
different. We like to learn from people that other people appear to be learning from. So we like to
learn from popular people. So you're quite right. We look at the like count and we, we, we like,
liked people because we become included in a group of people that,
that are liked and we hope to be liked ourselves.
And we want to learn from the group of people like us and from the people that
are liked by others.
So the like button was created from what you've said so far,
it was created for businesses to
to get likes to promote business but it's also become a personal thing right
if people post something on Instagram or Facebook they want people to like it and
they hate when people don't like it so it's it's moved from business to
personal. It's generally the case that when you create an like it. So it's moved from business to personal.
It's generally the case that when you create an innovation, it has an unintended beneficial
effect. You know, like the, often the thing is good at something you didn't anticipate. And
it almost always creates a new problem. With technology can happen very fast. So it can create,
you know, social dilemmas as we try to clamp down on the unintended side effect. And one of the unintended side effects of social media is that it has an addictive quality,
especially for young girls during a formative period of their social development.
There's good science showing that they're very sensitive to popularity and perceive popularity.
They do compare themselves with others.
And of course the like button feeds directly into that.
So if your daughter's late at night looking at her own like count and the like count of
her friends and which of her posts didn't get likes. It can be a very elating experience,
but also a very depressing experience.
And there's pretty good evidence that there's a pathology
of especially young teenage girls that are quite distressed
by the social comparative aspect of liking and being liked.
It's a very interesting innovation problem in itself
because if you can't foresee the beneficial effects
of an invention, how could you possibly foresee
the negative consequences,
which are really rather surprising.
I don't think anyone anticipated them.
What does the like button do for the person who posted
or who's looking for likes,
and then they get a bunch of likes
or they don't get a bunch of likes, what does it do to them?
Maybe we all know the answer to that question,
because it's the same question as what happens
when you're liked or disliked in real life.
And I think that's broadly true.
As far as we can tell, the brain chemistry of being liked and liking
is exactly the same as the brain chemistry of being liked or liking digitally. Exactly the same part
of the brain, same dopamine release, the same mood effects. We don't like being unpopular.
We love being popular. It's as simple as that. So is there a difference? There is a difference,
and it's one of quantity. So if I were to try to meet as many people as I could in one day called Mike and curry
favor with them, and if I tried really hard, I could probably meet five people called Mike
and have a conversation with them and try to curry favor with them.
The friction of social physics means I can't really, it's hard to overexpose myself to
these signals. That's not the case online if you go back to this very first question
It's important first question you ask which is how many times does the like button clicked the people that use social media click it?
multiple times a day 10 20 50 and so somebody receives or fails to receive those likes and
And we can do that at this very socially formative
of those likes. And we can do that at this very socially formative early
teenage stage.
And it can be deeply impactful.
So it's the overwhelming of our evolutionary circuits
by being liked or liking at a frequency
that evolution didn't design us to handle.
Well, I would imagine that most people who hit the like button
and there's zillions of
them every day that never think about what you've just been describing for the last half
hour about how this all works and what it does and what it doesn't do.
It's just a like button, but boy, there's a lot to the story that people don't know.
Indeed.
The fascinating thing was, I know, I guess technically,
um, Bob and I wrote the book, but honestly, that was not the way that it felt.
It felt like we were, we were being dragged along by this incredibly.
Multi-layered story of who invented the like button.
How did the like button become the basis for a multi billion dollar business?
Why the thumbs up?
What has this got to do with brain science?
How could you possibly regulate something like that?
It felt like we were peeling the onion and observing the story.
What was fascinating to us, I think, was just how much you could see in the microcosm.
From one perspective, you could say it's just one icon amongst many in the digital sphere, amongst
many in the human language sphere, and you couldn't possibly generalize in this. But
by focusing, I think there's a certain fascination in looking at the macrocosm in the microcosm.
Through this lens of this very small, humble icon, you can actually see a number of things,
right? You can see the evolution of gestural language.
You can see human sociality.
You can see how human brain science works.
You can see how social and serendipitous innovation works
in Silicon Valley.
You can see how businesses are born.
Well, after listening to you, it's
going to be hard to think about the like button in the same way
or press it or just press
it without thinking about some of the things you've said about it.
I've been talking with Martin Reeves.
He is chairman of the BCG Henderson Institute, which is a think tank for developing new ideas
in business.
And he's co-author of the book, Like the Button That Changed the World.
And there's a link to his book at Amazon in the show notes.
Thank you, Martin, for coming on
and peeling the layers back on the like button.
Yeah, my pleasure.
Thursday, May 8th is McHappy Day,
when every menu item purchased at McDonald's
helps support families with sick children.
So you can feel the good that comes from doing good,
just from ordering.
So if I order a Big Mac, I'm helping.
Yep.
What about a McFlurry?
10 piece chicken McNuggets and apple pie?
You got it.
Every single order helps.
Join us at McDonald's for McHappy Day on Thursday, May 8th.
Do good, feel good.
A portion of food and beverage sales will support RMHC chapters
in local children's charities across Canada.
Breaking news, a brand new game is now live at Bet365. Introducing Prize Matcher, and local children's charities across Canada. How can you match that? Check out PrizeMatcher and see why it's never ordinary at Bet 365.
Must be 19 or older, Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you or someone you know has concerns about gambling, visit connexontario.ca, T-Sensee Supply.
All of us human beings have things about our bodies, our physiology, that we rarely talk about.
And we rarely talk about them because
Well, we just don't either it's not polite to or we don't think about them
You know things like sweat or tears or breathing. I mean who talks about breathing
Yet these bodily functions that we all have in common are not only fascinating
they're important to understand because they are all involved in keeping you alive and healthy.
And here to help us understand these things is Cutter Wood, who has explored and researched
this topic and has written a book called Earthly Materials, Journeys Through Our Body's Emissions,
Excretions, and Disintegrations.
And I promise, I promise this is not a gross conversation at all.
So please stay with me.
Hey, Cutter, welcome to something you should know.
Hi, Mike, thanks for having me.
So let's start with breathing.
We all breathe all the time.
Most of us don't think much about it or talk about it,
but if you stop breathing, that's pretty much the end of you.
So breathing's pretty important.
The biggest thing that I think no one really thinks about
is you breathe so much, about 20,000 times every day.
And what folks don't often think is exactly what is occurring
in the body when that's happening.
Your body has to do this spectacular thing.
It's trying to get in as much oxygen as possible,
as quickly as possible,
and put that oxygen in contact
with the blood.
The structure of the lungs, they basically have all these little sacks, people know called
alveoli, they're like little grape sacks that the air goes into and then it gets put into
contact with the blood.
What that means is that basically with every one of those 20,000 breaths, you're spreading a soda can or two of blood across an area,
a soda can or two of air across an area
about the size of a tennis court.
It's really just this miraculous ability
that happens every single time you breathe.
My personal favorite detail about breathing
is that it is so connected to the brain.
You know, that makes a lot of sense, right?
This is about the most important thing your brain can be doing.
It's about as hardwired as it gets, right?
Your brain is controlled by these pulses of activity, kind of washing across the brain
this electrical activity.
And there's real evidence that the speed of your breath affects those rhythms.
So if your brain is behaving in a way you don't want to, if your thoughts are racing, you can essentially kind of hack into your
brain with your breathing and willfully exert some control over that process.
It's really pretty amazing and one of the few ways to actually affect
your body's function willfully. Which is why I suspect the idea of slow deep
breaths is a big part of meditation and mindfulness that it is a way to calm your brain down,
to calm your thoughts down.
So let's talk about hair and how hair grows
and why it's different colors and all that.
Because people spend a lot of time and money on their hair
and how they make it look without thinking so much
about the biology of it all.
So dive in there. and how they make it look without thinking so much about the biology of it all.
So dive in there.
You know, for instance, things which seem totally trivial, right?
Red hair versus blonde or something like that actually have dramatic consequences for your body.
So here's some big things.
The color of hair is very complicated, obviously, and determined less by evolution than by genetic
drift, just kind of chance mutations.
A couple of cool things here.
One, we often have this idea that blonde hair is associated with Northern Europe and Scandinavia
or that kind of things.
We know now, though, from genetic analysis that that's not where blonde hair came from
at all. It actually came from over towards Mongolia and Russia around Lake Baikal.
And it was only brought to Europe maybe 17,000 years ago with this mass migration of people.
That's a relatively recent one.
Much more fundamental though is red hair. Red hair is much, much older.
So old in fact that we know Neanderthals, some Neanderthals had red hair as well.
Which is really kind of amazing and mind boggling. older, so old in fact that we know neanderthals, some neanderthals had red hair as well, which
is really kind of amazing and mind boggling.
So the mutation that causes red hair, you know, comes out of the skin, so it's tied
up with a lot of the biology of the skin.
It is a much simpler and therefore, you know, much more profound mutation.
And one of the things it dictates is, well, there are two really, two big ones.
One, people with red hair are much more sensitive to ultraviolet rays, which means actually
that if you have red hair, it's basically equivalent to 21 extra years of exposure to
the sun.
Pretty wild, so it makes it important for somebody with red hair to wear their sunscreen,
right?
But then in a stranger and more profound way, people with red hair, they actually process pain differently.
The mechanisms by which pain is felt
by people with red hair are completely different
for other people.
So if you're prescribing a medication for pain,
like an opioid, you have to take that kind of thing
in account or you should be considering that when you do so.
When you say people with red hair process pain differently,
what does that mean? That it feels different or what?
Um, not, not necessarily less or more,
but that it takes basically a different pathway.
I think that'd be the best way to explain it.
It takes a different pathway.
So the drugs you use to treat pain in somebody say with brown hair or black
hair might not work as effectively in somebody with red hair or different.
They know they might be more sensitive to other drugs.
Well, that's weird.
Pretty wild, right?
Well, the other thing about hair that I find interesting,
well, there's a lot of things about hair that you find interesting,
but a lot of people, I was one of these people that,
you know, when I was very young, I had very blonde hair,
but that didn't last very long.
It got brown and it stayed brown for the rest of my life.
Yeah, yeah.
So one of the interesting things with hair is it's really, it's almost kind of a biomarker,
right?
Because it is so intimately tied up with your hormones, it's changing throughout your life.
People's hair actually, it gets thicker and thicker.
It actually gets, the diameter increases
up through your 20s usually in men
before slowly decreasing.
And of course with a lot of men,
the hair going away entirely.
I wanna talk about, and you know,
cause as I said before we started,
I don't wanna get too gross,
but mucus is something that I find interesting
in the sense that what is it doing here?
I mean, I'm already sick.
Why do I also have to deal with all the runny nose and the junk in my chest?
It must be serving a purpose, but I find it rather gross and distasteful.
Well, here's the good news.
The purpose it's serving actually, I think, is really amazing
and one of the least gross and distasteful things possible. Mucus, when I started this
project, was not one that I was extremely interested in. I'm not one to incline necessarily
to the gross-out material. But I was interested in it because I'd heard that they had this amazing lab up at MIT called
the BioGel Lab, the only woman-run lab at MIT.
It was really basically devoted to the study of mucus.
So I went up there and visited this lab.
And it turns out mucus is one of the most important things, if not the most important
thing that your body produces.
We often just think of blowing your nose,
that's what mucus is, right?
But really, it lines the nose, the mouth, the eyes,
the lungs, the entire digestive tract,
all told your body's making a gallon of mucus a day,
basically.
And as for what it actually does,
you probably think of it the way I was taught to think of it,
as a filter, right?
Some pollen or some dust goes into your nose and mucus stops it. It turns out that could almost not be further from the truth. It does do that
but it also plays a ton of different roles and in fact probably the most
important role it does is it's not about what it keeps out it's about what it
keeps in. So I'm sure you've heard of the microbiome, right? This kind of collection of thousands
of species of microbes that live on and in the human body. You know, they've got more
cells than the body itself, more DNA than the body itself, and they take care of all
these vital functions for you, right? They help to digest our food, they break down fiber
and complex carbohydrates, things like
that, producing energy for us.
They also discourage bad microbes, they stimulate the production of neurotransmitters, they
help to regulate metabolism and hunger.
Just this kind of really amazing suite of vital functions that these microbes provide.
So what it turns out is that mucus is actually the soil that the microbiome grows in.
This is where it lives, this is where it grows.
It is actually actively fed by your mucus, right?
A single strand of mucus is basically
like a long protein backbone studded with all these sugars.
And those sugars are there to feed your microbiome.
That's pretty wild, right?
But why does mucus tend to be more prominent
and there's more of it when you're sick?
Your nose gets runny, why?
So that's again, part of its role is also keeping stuff out
and one of the neat things it does is let let's say any microbe, a bacteria,
it can look one way, but it can actually evolve
depending on its circumstances, right?
What mucus can also do is when it realizes
that something is in your body that shouldn't be,
it latches onto that and can carry it away.
And it turns out actually there are,
we think of mucus as being one thing,
there are more than 20 different kinds of mucus.
And each of these fulfill a different function.
And one of those is to specifically
attach to dangerous things that are in your body
and take them out.
And so when it attaches to things
that are dangerous in my body,
does that mean it's trying to take out
the whatever it is in my body
that's causing me to have a cold or the flu,
or is it that fundamental,
or it's finding other things in there
that are also dangerous and trying to take them out, or what?
Well, it's doing a lot of different things.
It really depends on what the material is.
For instance, like an environmental contaminant,
say dust, right?
There it's a very simple process of just,
we're gonna increase the flow and wash this stuff away.
But with a different material like a microbe,
then it can be a much more complicated process.
So really we need to learn to love our mucus
because it's pretty important.
Absolutely, I mean, you would not last long without it.
One of the biggest things here, the NIH, the National Institute of Health, they estimate
that 80% of all internal infections are related to a dysfunction of your mucus.
Isn't that crazy?
80%.
You know, almost anything that goes wrong in there somehow is related to mucus.
So let's talk about urine, pee. We all know you drink something and it goes through your body and does what it does and it comes out. But I don't know that I know much about the process or what
happens. So since it is a universal experience that's probably worth understanding, let's talk about that.
Urine is a pretty amazing one.
It is actually, this is the beginning of laboratory medicine, right?
If you go back to ancient Sumeria, you have actually like, uroscopy, right?
The original form of evaluating a fluid to try and tell something about a human being's
body. They actually have symptoms and charts as a way to diagnose what's wrong with you.
Yet, it turns out that urine is this amazing diagnostic tool.
You can tell all kinds of things.
If your urine is purple,
it means you have porphyria and it actually will glow under a black light.
If it's green or blue, that might indicate an issue with some antidepressants.
If it's very dark, it can indicate that you're dehydrated or too light,
you have too much water in your system.
It's really this amazing substance just for learning about your own body.
And that's why when you go to the doctor, you pee in a cup and they send it to the lab, I guess.
Absolutely. And it's, you know, now these days,'s also, it is chock full of hormones, right?
You can, people will, they'll put vanilla actually into medication sometimes because
then you can tell just by the scent of the urine whether or not somebody is sticking
with a medication regimen.
You can tell by whether or not it has certain aromatics in it, whether or not somebody's
been exposed to wood smoke for like a, you know, a fire hazard or whether or not it has certain aromatics in it whether or not somebody's been exposed to wood smoke for like a
You know a fire hazard whether or not they need to be treated for that
One of the most amazing things is for years actually up in Manitoba
hundreds of thousands of horses were yet raised
Solely for their urine just to produce the the Premarin, which actually comes from pregnant mare urine
to treat symptoms of menopause.
And they still do that?
It's gone down now, you know, Premarin is not in a TA.
It was at one point in time,
one of the most prescribed medications in the country though.
My favorite detail about that is that actually
is one of those ones, you know,
I gave a reading and a doctor came up afterwards
and they said, you have to get Premarin in there.
Hundreds of thousands of horses.
Their only reason to exist is just basically to pee
in a cup and have it made into a pill.
Another thing humans excrete are tears.
And what's interesting to me about tears is
they're always there, right?
Lubricating your
eye.
But emotions can make lots of tears and they run down your face.
And the emotions that create that are both happiness and sadness.
So I'd be curious to know more about that.
Yeah, yeah.
So the important thing here, there are three kinds of tears, right?
There are the kind of everyday tears,
basal tears that your eyes just produce,
trying to keep your eye lubricated and moving around.
Then there are reflex tears, right?
Something blows into your eye.
If you get a bug in your eye, your eyes cry then.
But, and this is one of the things
that makes tears the most fascinating,
humans and only humans have this third kind of tear, emotional tears really, and we don't, we still don't have any idea
why.
They could also be used as a diagnostic tool, much like urine is, you know, if you were
able to simply kind of harness the minute quantities there.
And two, the thing I find most fascinating with tears is people are so afraid of them,
right?
Especially, you know, a lot of people are uncomfortable with the idea of crying, especially
men.
And I have a good friend, for instance, he's a lawyer, has never cried in his entire life.
And when his first child was born, he was so overcome with emotion that he passed out,
you know, just lost consciousness because he didn't know how to deal with it.
But what's so interesting to me about tears is,
and maybe there's no answer for this,
but it's the same reaction, the same reflex
for sadness and for happiness.
And I've heard the explanation that you cry
when you're happy to kind of tone down the happiness, to try to
keep you in a range of emotions that you don't go off the scale. I don't know if
that's true or not. It's not clear why people cry from both happiness and
sadness, but what is interesting about tears is that they do have this
emotionally regulatory effect it seems. And again, this is one of those things
that they can really vary person to person.
But what they found with studies is that when you cry,
actually it changes the ratio of activity
in your parasympathetic and your sympathetic nervous system.
So I know one of these is kind of your
fight or flight instinct, right?
And one is kind of your just kind of relaxing instinct.
And one of the things that tears seem to do is they amp up that fight or flight instinct
and then they suddenly quiet it down.
So again, I think it does have some, there's some evidence there to back up your idea that
crying really kind of keeps you in this safe range.
But going back to your friend who has never cried, he has never cried and he's proud of that or he's frustrated by that and wish he could or that's a badge of honor that he's never cried?
I don't think he's particularly proud of it. I don't think he's particularly disturbed by it either, but I think he had never thought about it too much when we talked about it. And then I think through our conversation, you realized it was something
that he should be thinking about more.
Because one of the, my biggest things
that I took away from research and crying is just,
it is a good way to realize what is important in life.
This is how we realize that a relationship
is important to us, right?
Because we say goodbye to that person
and we feel sad and we cry.
This is how we realize that we loved that movie because we laughed so hard that
we cried. This is, it's just a great signifier.
It can tell you so much about how you actually feel.
So the last thing we're going to talk about,
and I promise it won't get gross is throwing up vomit.
So I will let you take the lead on that one.
Well, yeah. So vomit, I decided that if I was going to write about this, I should experience it
for myself in the most intense way possible. So I joined a cult in Orlando called the SoulQuest
Church of Mother Earth. And this cult uses as its kind of, you know, quote unquote, holy medicine,
Earth. And this cult uses as its kind of, you know, quote-unquote holy medicine a drink called ayahuasca made of this Amazonian vine. And what this drink does
basically, you know, basically causes people to experience the most
excruciating nausea they've ever experienced in their entire lives. So I
signed up for this, much to my wife's dismay, and went down there. You know, they
they do this basically because you feel
very, very sick, so sick that eventually you vomit. And in vomiting, they think you meet
God, you commune with the spirit world, and you're healed of all this trauma. And for
me, that was not the case. I just kept feeling sicker and sicker and sicker. And of course, I'm lying out there in the sun
in this ridiculously humid day.
It's basically like being in a sweat lodge.
And so I didn't have any transcendent experience
except the experience of realizing
that I was so dehydrated, I was about to die.
And so yeah, I had to be evacuated from this place.
I never actually even experienced my own vomiting.
But this is the craziest thing.
I am still so thankful for this experience
because despite all of the personal unpleasantness for it,
the crazy thing of going down there
is seeing the other people who had come to this place
looking for relief.
You know, like I've said,
this is basically the most punishing thing
you can do to yourself.
So the people who go there hoping to find kind of healing
or help from this,
they're really, this is their option of last resort.
So you have people who are struggling with addiction.
There was a woman there who was only 18
and had already lost count of all the times
that she'd tried to commit suicide. One of the favorite people I met was a man who was a
veteran of the Korean War and he had such terrible PTSD that he could barely use his cell phone.
You know, and were they healed by ayahuasca? Not really, but it was this really kind of
beautiful atmosphere that you could get to meet these other people and actually kind of get a glimpse into
the most kind of tender parts of their lives.
And also while it was hard to see,
I think it was an important, for me,
a very important thing to see about the United States.
You know, this is what contemporary life
is doing to us a lot.
Well, thanks for coming on and not getting too gross
on a topic that can get pretty gross.
Cutter Wood has been my guest.
The name of his book is Earthly Materials,
Journeys Through Our Bodies, Emissions, Excretions,
and Disintegrations.
And if you'd like to read more, particularly more gross things,
there's a link to his book at Amazon in the show notes.
Cutter, thank you for being here.
Thank you, Mike.
I really appreciate you having me on the show and I'm looking forward to following along
Here's a situation a lot of people find themselves in you've got a favorite pair of shoes
But there's something wrong with them. They're in need of repair
Do you repair your shoes or do you just replace them?
Well, according to Business Insider, here's the rule. If the upper part of your shoe dries out or
starts cracking, then it's not worth repairing. But if the uppers are fine, the bottoms can always
be fixed. And by uppers, that means anything that isn't the sole of the shoe.
Even with a really expensive pair of shoes, you may think you're saving money by paying
$50 to repair them instead of buying a brand new pair.
But if you have to start fixing the uppers now, they're going to need more equally expensive
repairs before too long.
On the other hand, if the soles of the shoes are
ruined, that's easy and not very expensive to fix and can give you
several extra years of life and leave you feeling like you have a brand new
pair of shoes. The trick is to make sure you find a good repair shop because they
are not all created equal and that is something you should know. If you enjoyed hearing about the like button today
or about your body's excretions, I hope you will share this podcast with someone else
who would also enjoy hearing about those topics. I'm Mike Carruthers. Thanks for listening today
to Something You Should Know. Do you love Disney? Do you love top 10 lists? Then you are going to love our hit podcast,
Disney Countdown. I'm Megan, the Magical Millennial. And I'm the dapper Danielle. On every episode
of our fun and family friendly show, we count down our top 10 lists of all things Disney.
The parks, the movies, the music, the food, the lore. There is nothing we don't cover
on our show. We are famous for rabbit holes, Disney themed games, and fun facts you didn't know you
needed.
I had Danielle and Megan record some answers to seemingly meaningless questions.
I asked Danielle what insect song is typically higher pitched in hotter temperatures and
lower pitched in cooler temperatures.
You got this.
No I didn't.
Don't believe that.
About a witch coming true?
Well I didn't either. Of course I'm just. Don't believe that. About a witch coming true? Well, I didn't either.
Of course I'm just a-
Cicada.
I'm crying.
I'm so sorry.
You win that one.
So if you're looking for a healthy dose of Disney magic, check out Disney Countdown wherever
you get your podcasts.
From the podcasts that brought you to each of the last lesbian bars in the country and back in time through the sapphic history that shaped them comes a brand new season of cruising beyond the bars.
This is your host, Sarah Gabrielli, and I've spent the past year interviewing history-making lesbians and queer folks about all kinds of queer spaces, from bookstores to farms to line dancing and much more.
For 11 years, every night women slept illegally on the common.
We would move down to the West Indies to form a lesbian nation.
Meg Christen coined the phrase women's music, but she would have liked to say it was lesbian music. And that's kind of the origins of the convoy.
You were a collective.
You can listen to cruising on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
New episodes air every other Tuesday starting February 4th.