Stuff You Should Know - 10ish Instances of People Doing Things Out Of Spite
Episode Date: January 30, 2025You want payback don’t you? Sure, we all do. We all want it so bad. So bad. Sometimes people do things to get payback against someone who’s wronged them and sometimes those things they do ...are memorable and monumental. We commemorate some here.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and this is Stuff You Should Know.
And this episode Chuck just made fun of, even though I took pride
in helping to assemble it.
Oh, it's fine.
That's a top 10, we haven't done those in forever.
No.
It's always kind of a fun throwback,
and it seems like we never do 10.
With our 3X structure, nine is probably a great number,
but I guess we'll see what happens, right?
Let's see what happens.
So you know the old saying, cut off your nose to spite your face?
Yes.
And I feel like we did this on an internet roundup or something, maybe.
It sounded really familiar.
This story did?
It did.
Okay.
Not to you?
No, as a matter of fact, it was all new to me, but that doesn't mean we didn't do it
already.
Yeah, but you would remember this one because it involves self-mutilation.
So just want to put out there that this actually has nothing to do with that phrase.
And I'll explain why that phrase doesn't actually have anything to do with this.
Oh, really?
But I guess I should probably say that we're starting this episode out in like the worst
possible way with a really downer of a story that may or may not have to do with spite.
So I say we just go ahead and start that now.
Okay.
Yes, there is a book, and this is as the story goes,
the book in 1904 called A Dictionary of Saintly Women.
The story is that Viking, you know, berserker raider types came pillaging southward to the British Isles at one point.
Well, not at one point, in 867 CE specifically.
And while they were doing their berserkering and ravaging of the villages and things,
there was obviously the kind of thing that would happen would be assaults on people, physically,
sexually and otherwise.
And so when they went to a monastery in Scotland, the Coldingham Monastery, the lead nun, Saint
A.B. the Younger, said, hey, here's what we'll do.
We want to keep our chastity and our covenant to God.
It's a big deal for us nuns,
we should cut off our noses to keep that from happening because they won't assault us then. But not to spite our faces, to spite the Vikings.
Yeah, not even to spite, I think. I think it's to protect themselves from sexual assault.
Sure.
I mean, this is all horrific.
It is horrific, yeah. No, I'm not saying like this is a laugh riot or anything like that.
No, no, no.. It is horrific, yeah. No, I'm not saying like this is a laugh riot or anything like that. I'm just saying.
No, no, no, I didn't think you were.
Anyway, back to the horrific story.
St. Abbey said, and she wasn't a saint at the time,
but this certainly helped her case later on.
She said, come nuns, let's go sit around and talk.
I have something to say to you.
To prevent ourselves from losing our chastity,
from being raped by these Vikings,
we're gonna cut off our own noses, I'm gonna cut
off my lip and maybe I'll inspire you to do the same.
And the rest of the sisters said, yes, let's do that.
And they did.
And there's actually old like wood cuttings
and there's at least one stained glass panel
of this happening and it's gory.
Even as a wood cutting, it's gory.
And when the Vikings showed up,
they found these nuns missing their noses,
bleeding, missing their lips, just in quite a state.
And they were like, we're just gonna move on
to the next monastery and see what we find there.
The nuns, however, were not,
their lives were not spared, were they? Yeah, it gets even worse because what the Vikings did was burn
the place down with them inside and killed them all. Yeah, but there's a different way of looking
at this and that is that these nuns protected their chastity, which as you said is like really,
really important. They're known as
the brides of Christ and that's one of the reasons why they're chaste, why they're meant to die
virgins is because they have given themselves to Christ or to God. So as long as they're chaste
and they die chaste, then they have fulfilled this covenant. Even if it's not by their own will or decision that they, um, lose their
virginity, if they lose it through force, still
not quite the same as dying chase.
So, um, they managed to come out on top,
religiously speaking.
So that's that story.
Oh, the reason why, um, it doesn't have anything
to do with cutting your nose up to spite your
face is because that phrase means
that you're doing something in revenge to somebody else
or to harm somebody else,
but you're actually harming yourself much worse
than you are them.
Yeah, and they just burned them down.
They didn't spite anybody.
Right.
So that's a heck of a way to kick off
what was supposed to be a semi lighthearted top 10 list.
Yeah, but doesn't it mean to spite your own face?
Right, so you're harming yourself.
Yeah, I gotcha.
See what I'm saying?
Yeah, I just got confused.
It's kinda like there's another saying
that hating somebody is like drinking poison
and expecting them to die.
I've never heard that.
It's a good one.
It really gets the point across.
It makes you not wanna hate or steal
something about someone else.
Wow, that's really good.
I like that.
Thanks a lot.
I just made it up.
Look at you dropping nugs.
All right, let's talk about Henry Clay Frick
because he was a Gilded Age, I don't know about Robber Baron,
but he was at very least a mogul.
And along with Andrew Carnegie,
they made quite a lot of money together
as partners in the steel industry.
That relationship went south,
and Carnegie got him out of the picture,
got Frick out of the picture,
and to the point where Carnegie was sued
and Frick actually won a lawsuit
and won compensation and everything,
but it wasn't like he was like,
all right, we're all even now.
He hated Andrew Carnegie for the rest of his life.
Yeah, anytime Carnegie's companies,
I can't remember which steel company he owned,
but anytime there was some misstep or bad decision
or business went awry, Frick would send a note
chiding him or taunting him
for having made a terrible decision.
Just constantly kept it up.
I think Carnegie built a mansion in New York,
and Frick was like, oh yeah, I'm going to build an even bigger one
right down the street just to show you up.
Would not let it go.
Yeah, for sure.
Anything you can do, I can do bigger and better.
And so you would think at the end of their lives,
they could just let bygones be bygones.
And that's what Andrew Carnegie tried to do
when he was in failing health.
Said, can you get in touch with my old partner, Frick,
Mr. Henry Clay Frick, and tell him he's got a great name,
and tell him that I'd like to meet up with him
and patch this thing up before we're gone off of this earth.
And so they brought the letter,
he dispatched as his personal secretary, James Bridge,
to send this to Frick personally.
And Frick apparently balled up the letter
and threw it back at him and said,
tell him I'll see him in hell where we were both going.
Yeah, great comeback.
I'll meet him in hell.
Yeah, his other thing that he was said to have said
was not until he admits that I'm the Marion,
you're the Rhoda.
What?
Oh man, if you, I know you're getting into some old TV
and you always have been, but if you,
do you have Criterion, the Criterion channel, streamer?
No.
Highly recommended by the way.
Sure.
Like it's really the only great one out there
as far as quality stuff.
But they have old Mary Tyler Moore,
or maybe that was on Max.
I can't remember, but anyway,
Emily and I started watching old Mary Tyler Moore episodes.
Like the original where she worked at the TV station?
Yeah.
And it is, I watched a little bit when I was a kid,
but man, it is so good and it's so funny
and charming and witty and like still great.
Yeah. It holds up.
Those shows used to like just be written so well too
and acted too.
She was so good.
I can't remember, there's one episode where,
I think Ted.
Yeah, Ted Knight. where I think Ted, he was doing something
and it was so ridiculous and preposterous,
but he was playing it straight so well
that the rest of the cast just started cracking up
and they couldn't not, they did it in every take
and it ended up kind of in the show.
It's some classic, well-known episode,
but check that one out, make sure you see that one too. and it ended up kind of in the show. It's some classic, like, well-known episode,
but check that one out.
Make sure you see that one, too.
Oh, so good. Ted Knight and...
Who's the woman who played Rhoda?
Valerie Bertinelli? No.
No? Valerie...
Oh, it's killing me.
Valerie Harper.
There you go.
Valerie Harper.
Ed Asner. It's like, it's just, it's really me. Valerie Harper. There you go. Valerie Harper.
Ed Asner, it's really a great, great show.
And Mary Tyler Moore is just a gem of a human.
I hope she's still good as a person.
Sure.
I watched the documentary about her.
It's worthwhile.
Oh, really?
Yeah, it's excellent, in fact.
All right, I'll check it out.
Yeah, quite a woman.
Well, thanks for the recommendation.
Hey, sure. I feel like we've killed some time. Should we quite a woman. Well, thanks for the recommendation. Hey, sure.
I feel like we've killed some time.
Should we do a third and then take a break?
I think that's a great idea, Chuck.
All right, we're gonna talk about Saddam Hussein.
And Saddam Hussein didn't like one George H.W. Bush,
who was the guy who said his name that way
because of the first Gulf War.
Yeah, he said, sure, I invaded Kuwait,
but that doesn't mean you have to come
over here and liberate Kuwait.
And George Bush said, yes, we do.
And as a result, after this war Saddam Hussein was still in power and he
apparently was willing to use his power in all sorts of weird ways and tacky ways,
frankly, and one of the ways and tacky ways, frankly.
And one of the ways he did that was he had a mosaic mural, an unflattering mosaic mural of George Bush laid into the floor of the
entrance of the Al Rashid Hotel, one of the nicest hotels in Baghdad, if not the nicest.
And the whole reason was, it also said Bush is criminal on it too.
And the reason was is that anyone coming
into this well-traveled hotel
would walk right over George Bush's face.
Right, and if you walked around it,
you were given a bad room.
Right, or taken out back and shot one of the two.
Did you look at a picture of this?
I did, it is an unflattering portrait.
But you can totally tell who it is.
You totally tell who it is.
It's big old George Bush Sr. right there on the floor of the hotel, of the lobby.
It's a very strange thing to see in a nice hotel.
Yeah.
But W came along later on, went back to Iraq for the war there
on the basis of weapons of mass destruction
that did not exist.
And he had them smash that up and he's like,
Daddy, I'm not gonna let him do that to you.
Here's some sledgehammers.
And so they went in there and they smashed that thing up
and chiseled it up and supposedly laid a portrait of Saddam.
They didn't do that inosaic tile, did they?
I don't think so.
From what I saw, it looked just like a picture.
I didn't see a close-up of it.
I just saw it so interesting next to it.
Yeah, I couldn't find one either.
Like the head was out of proportion with the body.
It's like, here's some sledgehammers
and I need a good tile guy in Baghdad.
Right?
The sledgehammers had don't mess with Texas engraved on them.
They probably did.
But yeah, I mean, that's spiteful, right?
To make a mosaic portrait of one of your sworn enemies
so that your people walk all over him.
I think so, to ruin your hotel lobby,
your nicest hotel lobby.
Yeah.
All right, so we have a definitive example of spite.
That's right.
Well then, I think that means we should take a break
while we're ahead.
All right, we'll be right back with three more
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["I'm Not Gonna Give You Up"]
Okay, Chuck, I guess we should, at this point,
decide which one we're not going to do
if we're doing three, three, and three.
Well, I think the Beatles one has the least amount of meat on the bone.
All right, I was gonna skip that one too,
or suggest we do.
Great.
And if you did it, I was just gonna not talk,
so I was gonna skip it either way.
Well, I mean, we can just quickly say that at one point,
after the Beatles break up, John Lennon wrote a song
where he talked a lot of trash about Paul McCartney.
So everyone knows that story.
Out of spite.
It's a very, very famous story.
But the one that's really interesting to me is Ford versus Ferrari because that is a terrific
movie that I highly recommend.
Is it on Criterion Channel?
I doubt it, but I'm sure you could stream it somewhere.
The great James Mangold directed it,
and I'm always a fan of his work.
He did the new Bob Dylan movie.
What else?
He did the last Indiana Jones movie,
which was better than the one before.
What else?
I don't know.
He's done a, James Mangold's good.
He sort of has a very varied resume,
which I always appreciate in a director.
Yeah, I was gonna say that's all over the place for sure.
Yeah.
So I guess if you've seen Ford versus Ferrari,
you're familiar with this story?
I am, and I do recommend it.
He also did the Wolverine movie and the Logan movie.
So yeah, he's all over the place.
Okay, so I'm gonna tell the story then,
because I haven't seen that movie, so this was new to me.
Ooh, you'd like it.
Okay.
So, um, in the sixties, Henry Ford II, uh, who was the successor president
of the Ford Motor Company, um, and I guess probably a relative of Henry Ford's.
He decided that he wanted Ford to get into racing just to basically like
make Ford just to expand the brand basically,
rather than just giant land yachts.
We also make really fast cars too.
Totally.
He also was like, you know,
I know that there's probably easier ways
to get into racing than to build race cars.
And that is let's just buy Ferrari.
Like they were already known around the world
for building cars that were just fast as all get out.
That's right.
And their very famous founder Enzo Ferrari
pitched a deal for 18 million bucks
for 90% interest in the company.
And as the movie portrays it, this isn't in this article,
but as the movie portrays it, if I'm not mistaken,
and I'm not sure if it's true or not,
but at least it was in the movie,
I don't see why they would make this part up,
is that he was using that deal
to get a better deal from Fiat.
So playing one against the other,
which will really make someone mad in business.
Sure.
Apparently when Ford showed up to sign the paperwork,
Ferrari said that, you know what,
this Ford assembly line, this bureaucracy
that you've got in this company,
is not how we do it over here, so no deal.
Right. And Ford was not very happy about this, right?
Of course not.
So, out of spite, and to get back at Ferrari, and I think also to get into racing too,
Ford decided to build their own race car, which came out to be the Ford GT40.
And I went and looked it up.
I'm not a car dude, but I am like,
this is an amazing car.
Yeah, I'm the same way, man.
And in fact, it actually did best Ferrari Le Mans in 1966.
And you can buy that car,
at the very least the original body,
that won Le Mans in 1966,
for a cool $675,000
from, it looks like a private owner in Jacksonville, Florida.
Wow.
Jacksonville.
It's beautiful.
So they won first, second, and third,
so they really bested Ferrari.
They also won in subsequent years,
so they swept in, or not swept,
but they won in 66, 67, 68, and 69.
That's a sweep?
Well, I meant not sweep first, second, and third place.
Oh, gotcha.
Or they may have, I don't know.
But I think we should do one of the 24 hours of Le Mans
because that's, I'm not a car race guy,
but that to me is the most interesting one.
Yeah, because they just drive around and around and around
for 24 hours to see who can go the furthest,
right?
Yeah, I think it's pretty cool.
It's an endurance race.
And it's not just like a circular NASCAR thing,
they're driving through streets.
Right, and every once in a while it starts to get boring,
they just push pedestrians out in there
and see what happens.
Exactly.
So there's a little more to this story,
a little separate spoke that Ferrari had going on
at about the same time or a couple of years earlier.
Our friends at Mental Floss pointed out
that Lamborghini actually was founded
out of spite to Ferrari.
Yeah, apparently the founder of Lamborghini, John Smith.
His name was Ferruccio Lamborghini.
He was a tractor maker in the 60s and he had a Ferrari.
And he was like, this clutch is kind of janky.
And as the story goes, he got in touch with Enzo Ferrari
and was like, hey, I think I can help make your clutch better
because you got this problem here with this spawn divot
and I can help make that thing better.
And apparently, as the story goes, Ferrari
did not receive that phone call well
and was basically like get lost.
Yeah, he said stick to making tractors, Lamborghini.
Who's ever heard of Lamborghini?
Exactly, what a weird name for a car.
Right, so Lamborghini was like,
well I'm just gonna go make my own car.
And in 1963 I believe he started making Lamborghinis
with the help of five workers
who had recently been fired from Ferrari.
That's how he established his car company.
And had Enzo Ferrari not rebuffed him,
we would never have that classic Garfield poster
from the 80s where he's standing next to a Countach.
Right, the Countach.
You and I are not car guys,
but if I see a Lamborghini on the street or something,
or the old Magnum Ferrari, I'd love that stuff.
Tinkle yourself?
A little bit.
I'm not a sports car guy,
but I just can't help but see those and think,
what an amazing machine that is.
Gorgeous.
Those Magnum Ferraris you can get for a song these days,
I mean, they don't work very well, but.
Like how much?
I don't know.
I'm gonna guess anywhere between 10 and 50 grand.
Yeah, I mean, considering how much they were,
that is a song, you know.
It is.
And they're so small too.
Like I'm not sure either one of us
could fit in one of those.
Yeah, I mean I think every guy,
I mean Thomas Magna fitted him.
Yeah, I think that was a stunt double half his size.
Really, well he was, when it showed him in the car,
his knees were up toward his chin a bit.
Like up by his ears.
Yeah, because he was a tall guy.
But I, like that Ferrari, I feel like for guys
of our generation, that Ferrari and the Porsche
from Risky Business are like two of the top five,
probably, Dream Tars.
Was that a 944, a 911?
It was the, no, it wasn't the 911, it was the 928.
I'm not familiar with that one, then. Yeah, it had the lights that popped up.
It was one of the not as lauded versions, I think.
But man, and it's just something about that movie.
It just sort of locked it in.
I mean, it's like a little hatchback.
It's not even that special.
Hatchback.
When you look at it now.
Yeah, for grocery shopping.
Exactly. How many have we done for this thing?
We just did one, right?
Yeah, yeah, we gotta get going.
Okay, all right, let's get going.
Because it turns out that there was a road
in China made out of spite.
That's right.
And I feel like I've seen this
in more than one place in the world where-
Oh, really?
Yeah, not even necessarily a road,
but like where like, well, you don't wanna give up
your house, so we're just gonna build these skyscrapers
all around it.
Right, sure.
Did you see pictures of this though?
Oh yeah, this is the extreme because,
and this happened in China to this couple in 2012.
The man's name was Luo Bogen name was Luo Bogan.
Bogan.
Bogan.
Mm-hmm.
He and his wife refused to, you know,
they tried to come in and take their house
to make a highway, and they were like,
no, we're not gonna do it.
You didn't offer us enough money,
and so we're not going anywhere.
And so they built, I mean, if you visualize,
you're visualizing a house literally sort of
in the middle of a road and the road just goes around it,
that's what they did.
Yeah, like it wasn't even a roundabout.
It's just that the road widened and kind of curved
in a bulge on the sides around this house,
literally in the middle of a highway.
Even worse, even more reckless if you ask me,
they kept electricity going to this house,
so there's an electrical pole
in the middle of the highway too, totally unmarked.
This is a highway.
It doesn't look real.
No, it doesn't.
It does not at all, does it?
And if you wanna see what we're talking about,
the Atlantic has a good photo spread
called The House in the Middle of the Street
from 2012.
Yeah, I mean, this is the most extreme case
of something like this that I've heard.
It didn't take long for them to give in, obviously,
because it was, well, dangerous and awful.
And so they did eventually give in
and got a larger offer than they originally asked for,
but I don't get the feeling that they thought they won.
No, they definitely didn't.
So I looked into this a little further.
It was a five story house that they had just built
for 95 grand when the provincial government said,
you need to move because we're building
a highway through here.
And they weren't the only ones who had kind of tried
to stick it out.
So they were also aware that they could not leave their house.
They had to stay in their house 24 hours a day, because if they left,
the government would come and bulldoze their house while they were gone and
be like, TS, what are you gonna do?
And they had no choice, but just holding out was kind of a protest and
to draw attention to this generally unfair practice.
Cuz I mean, any government can exercise eminent domain,
but typically you want to give at least market value.
Yeah, I mean, it's really egregious
when you look at this picture.
It's nuts, because they were on like their porch,
like a second floor balcony, and they're looking down,
and you're looking down, not at a front yard,
you're looking down at the road.
Like it went right around this house.
Yeah, through it practically.
Yeah, so that was a spiteful road.
That was a spiteful road,
and now we're gonna talk about a spiteful statue.
That's right.
Because in Germany, between the towns of Bonn and Buhl,
there's the old Rhine River
and the Rhine River bridge that connects the two.
And so the little bridge man or the Bruchenmanken,
Bruchenmanken, it's kind of a mouthful,
is the little bridge man and that is a sculpture of a guy
sort of bent over sticking his butt out.
And that became the subject of a lot of contention eventually backfiring. Is that right?
Yeah, so the story went that in the late 19th century, I think December 17th, 1898, this bridge
between Bonn and Buell, which was supposed to be a joint construction project between the two,
ended up being paid for entirely by Bonn,
because Buell was like, we'll use the bridge,
but we're not gonna pay for it,
you go ahead and pay for it.
And so, under wraps until this unveiling of the bridge,
was that little statue of a little man,
carved into the bridge, with his butt sticking out,
basically mooning Buell.
Can you imagine just the hilarity of seeing that?
Yeah.
When it was unveiled?
Pretty good.
But like I said, it backfired because that statue
became a bit of a local icon.
So it was on banknotes, it was on,
people took pictures of it, it was on local postcards,
and it was a little tourist attraction.
But what they did was they put attacks on the bridge,
but only attacks going one way and not back into your own place.
Right.
So what happened was from the Buell side, they could see the statue,
because it was pointing, you know, their butt was pointing at them.
So they got all the benefits of seeing this thing without having to pay to cross the bridge, because it was pointing, you know, their butt was pointing at them. So they got all the benefits of seeing this thing
without having to pay to cross the bridge to see it.
If you're on the other side and you wanted to go,
like actually see this statue,
you had to pay to get across.
Yeah, and you can believe that anytime you had
out of town guests visit, you had to take them
to go see the little bridge man.
Go see the butt man.
So yeah, they ended up what was supposed to be a joke at the expense of Buell ended up
to be an actual expense for the city of Bonn because they had to pay this fee to get onto
the bridge.
But supposedly they're friendly rivals still, or they were.
Now I think they're one town, kind of like Budapest.
There's Buda and Pest and it's separated by the river, but it's still one city now.
Yeah.
Same thing.
And that's what Bonnebue.
That's how I understand it.
So this, you can still see the little bridge man,
but he's not the original.
The original was almost destroyed in the Second World War.
The bridge was at least, but they were able to get their hands on the statue
and get them out of the Rhine.
They put them back on the rebuilt bridge,
but then some local youths in 1960 destroyed that.
So now there's a recreation of it on the bridge.
Little punk rockers.
Yeah, little punks at least.
So that was a little bridge man made out of spite.
All right, and I think that's break number two,
and we'll be back to finish up with three more
right after this.
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Explosives, Chuck and Jack.
There's stuff you should know.
You should know.
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All right, we're gonna talk about,
and I've seen stories sort of like this, but this one
seems to take the cake.
When a Christmas display goes too far, and all of a sudden people or neighbors are like,
hey, this is getting out of hand.
It's too bright, or it's, you know, people are driving in to see these things now and
I can't even get down my own street.
Right.
And this happened in the mid 2000s in Ross Township, Pennsylvania, when a dude named
Bill, an electrician, he, named Bill Ansell did a pretty, you know, audacious Christmas
display in his front yard there in Ross Township, such that people were driving in and neighbors
started to get annoyed.
Yeah, and actually the way that this neighborhood was arranged is a cul-de-sac,
but in the center of the cul-de-sac
was Bill Ansel's house.
So with his light display,
it was just kind of like driving through
a holiday light display because you just drive past
and go all the way around
and come back on the other side and leave.
It's kind of perfect, actually.
It was perfect,
and Bill Ansel definitely thought it was perfect.
But like you said, the neighbors were like, man, come on.
This is 100,000 watts of Christmas joy.
It's just too much.
So can we do something about this?
Bill Ansell apparently was not the type
to take criticism well.
Sounds like it.
I think he actually was required to take down
the holiday display.
And- By the town?
Yes.
I think they cited him for an out of season decoration
or something like that, right?
So he took it down, but in short order,
he put up a new display and specifically designed it
so that the neighbors regretted ever asking him to take down the original joyous display.
And he did this, Chuck, out of spite.
That's right.
And apparently left it up year round.
Santa urinating in the front yard,
a choir that was beheaded,
Frosty the snowman getting run over by a car,
also up in lights, F Ross Township.
Yeah.
Just right there in string lights.
A sign that said this display is dedicated
to Ross Township, shame on you for destroying my display
that brought so much joy and happiness to so many people.
There was also a warning, a sign that said,
Ross Township, don't touch any of this property.
If you do, there will be bloodshed.
Is that true?
Yeah.
Okay.
No, it totally is.
And there was another one.
I read an interview with 2020 with the neighbors
who were like, this guy actually wrote a sign.
I didn't see what he said, but he came up with
the disparaging sign for the deceased wife of Tom White,
one of the neighbors.
The day after she died, he put up some sign
disparaging her.
So this guy was definitely off the chain with this thing.
And I mean, like he would stay up at night and hit
metal with sledgehammers to make noise.
He had floodlights pointed directly in the neighbor's houses.
And I mean, living like that's bad enough, but they said something that stuck out
to me that I hadn't thought of that's like, this is a living nightmare.
When you have a neighbor like that and you sell your house, anytime you have a
showing, they're going to turn around before they even get out of their car.
That's like, you're trapped.
They were totally trapped there.
And despite the township fining him, despite court orders,
like you said, he kept it up year round
and he kept it up for years.
Yeah, and then he built a kill dozer.
Yes, I thought that there was definitely a parallel
between those guys too.
Yeah, be a good neighbor, everyone.
Be a good neighbor to your neighbor.
That's all you got to do.
You don't have to, you can go above and beyond if you want, but
just be like base level good.
Sure.
And if your neighbors, if your neighbors come to you with a complaint about some
special thing that's special to you, rather than going off the handle, maybe
say, well, let's figure out a compromise.
Cause this is really important to me.
Yeah.
And let's not tank everyone's property values.
We're all in this together.
Sure.
And if they're like, no, we insist you take it down, then you do something on
Spite, at least give them a fighting chance.
That's right.
This is, this is super Spite.
So we want to thank not just our friends at 2020, but our friends at Mental
Floss too, for pointing that one out to us.
That's right.
So I think we got a couple more, right?
That's right.
We'll move on to Prince Rogers Nelson, AKA Prince,
AKA for a little while,
the artist formerly known as Prince,
because very famously Prince changed his name in 1993 when to
an unrecognizable symbol. It was sort of a symbol for a man and woman and it had
some other flourishes and had kind of been tweaked and redesigned over the
years. It was on different pieces you know he had a guitar shaped like that
previously I think it was on his motorcycle in Purple Rain, maybe.
Oh, yeah.
But it was a symbol that had been around his world for a while.
And Prince said, you know, that's my name now.
And everyone just thought he was weird.
Don't wear it out because you can't say it.
So that's impossible.
But I think at the time, I remember everyone just thought it was Prince being Prince
and being strange and being eccentric.
But it is now pretty widely accepted
that he did that to spite Warner Brothers records
because he was in a record contract he didn't like
for numerous reasons.
Yeah, and it was a very lucrative contract.
A lot of people were playing like the world's smallest
violin for Prince at the time.
He had re-signed it too, by the way.
20 years later, re-signed with the same company.
And I saw- No, no, no.
He re-signed before this one.
This was the second version. Oh, really?
He re-signed a third time later.
I gotcha, okay, did not realize that.
But this was like a hundred million dollar contract.
It was worth $215 million today.
It was a big, fat contract.
The thing is, is Prince, I saw, like, when he died,
when they went into his audio archives,
they're like, he could release an album, like,
every month for the next 50 years or something like that.
He had that much stuff recorded.
And he wanted to release music really quickly
with high turnover.
And Warner Brothers is like,
no, you're gonna flood the market.
You're gonna shoot yourself in the foot.
You can only release X number of albums
every say 12 months, so like one a year maybe
or something like that.
He didn't like that.
And then apparently, Warner Brothers owned the rights
to his songs too, which I'm quite sure
he really, really didn't like.
So to get out of his contract, he thought,
well, okay, the contract is between Prince
and Warner Brothers, I'm gonna change my name
and maybe the contract won't be valid any longer.
I'm not sure how much he actually believed that
because Prince wasn't a dumb person at all.
But at the very least, he was trying to humiliate
Warner Brothers, make life harder for them,
and he did all this, as you said, out of spite.
That's right, he also wrote the word slave on his cheek
in a lot of performances at the time.
And it didn't work.
He had to see the contract through,
which was just another few years.
I think in 2000 it expired.
And then he was Prince again.
And like you said, you know, bygones were bygones,
I guess, because he resigned yet again,
20 years later with Warner Brothers.
Yeah, one of the things that Warner Brothers
too had to do, Chuck, was they Warner Brothers. Yeah, one of the things that Warner Brothers too
had to do Chuck, was they had to send out
digital files to the media, and this is the 90s,
because there was no way to,
there was no like combination of keys on the keyboard
to make this symbol, so they had to send
a digital image of the symbol for the,
like newspapers or magazines or whatever
to insert into their articles about Prince.
And then finally, the media was just like,
we're just gonna call him the artist
formerly known as Prince.
And Prince was like, damn it.
Right, work around.
Yeah, exactly.
So RIP Prince, man, he was pretty great.
Yes, my friend and your friend, Scotty,
got to go to his final performance, the solo Atlanta performance at the Fox Theater Yes, my friend and your friend, Scotty,
got to go to his final performance,
the Solo Atlanta performance at the Fox Theater
just days before he died.
And it always makes me so mad
because Scotty didn't even really love Prince.
Yeah.
Now I'm glad he got to go.
He just showed up there like, how did I get here?
So that's one of those,
we almost went and pulled the trigger to scalp tickets
and it was just like, I don't know why we didn't,
because it was special enough to be a piano solo concert by Prince.
I was like, man, we gotta go.
And we didn't, and then he died.
Yeah, we were going to do the same thing,
and that's actually a, well, we weren't gonna scalp,
we were gonna go, and I don't remember why we didn't.
But that's kind of par for the course for me,
because I did that with Prince, I did that with Pink Floyd,
I did that with Stevie Ray Vaughan,
and I did that with the Grateful Dead.
I was just like, I'll see him next time.
I saw Prince when I lived in LA in the late 90s,
or I'm sorry, yeah, I guess it was early 2000s.
And that was amazing, just being able to see him once
with a full band, it was something else. You saw him for some tour, I think it was early 2000s. And that was amazing, just being able to see him once with a full band, it was something else.
You saw him for some tour, I think musicology tour,
and she was like hands down the best show I've ever seen.
Yeah, boy, what a loss.
Apparently he was quite the dancer.
He was, I also saw Tom Petty on that last tour.
I saw him quite a few times,
but I was really glad to be at that last one.
Yeah, he was cool.
He was one of those guys that you appreciate
the older you get, you know what I mean?
One of the best, no, he's one of my faves.
Great.
Let's move on to the pink house, Chuck.
The last of the last.
You mean John Mellencamp?
No, that's a little pink house.
This is just the pink house.
That's right.
This is another image search quality,
or image search worthy kind of thing to look up.
If you're in a place where you can do that, just type in Plum Island Pink House,
and you will see a quite large pink house sitting in the middle of nothing.
Just a desolate marshland.
Yeah.
And it's just looking at it, it's very eerie, especially now it's abandoned,
it's kind of ramshackle and run down.
But it was built on Plum Island, and it's considered one of the all-time great examples of a spite house.
And a spite house is basically any house, wall, structure that's built to get under someone else's skin, right?
So sometimes it's built to block their view.
We talked about Henry Clay Frick building a mansion
that was bigger than Andrew Carnegie's
that would be considered a spite house.
And then America, they go back at least until 1806.
That was the earliest one I could find.
But this one on Plum Island
off the coast of Newberryport, Massachusetts,
which by the way is one of the more charming towns
in the entire country.
Oh, I've never been there.
Oh, it's wonderful.
That's where this pink house is.
And there's a great backstory to it
that makes it a spite house.
Made out of spite. That's right.
A lot of times these spite houses happen
when a couple gets divorced.
It should come as no surprise.
Or I should say probably couples
with a lot of money get divorced. Because what I've learned is in order to have a spite
house you have to be rich.
Right.
Well, I'm just going to build that huge house to get back at someone. It's a very privileged
position to be in.
For sure.
So, you know, I am judging. But in 2015, there was a New York Times article that talked about this thing that was built,
like you said, in the middle of nowhere.
It said it was overlooking a vast landscape
of pristine salt marsh.
And it apparently happened in 1925
when a couple got divorced and the wife said,
all right, we can get a divorce,
but you have to rebuild an exact duplicate
of the house we live in if you're kicking me out of it
because I love it so much.
And he went, no problem.
And so he built it and he said, you didn't say where.
And he said it just like that I bet.
Yep, he did.
So he built it on Plum Island.
At the time there was no one else living there.
No fresh water, no electricity.
It was just the worst place you could build a house.
And he said, there you go.
There's your spite house.
And, uh, he walked away rubbing the dust off of his hands.
Or what do you call that?
Yeah, that whatever clapping the dust off your hands.
Yeah.
We need to come up with a name for that.
Right.
Yeah.
Um, yeah, so yeah, that's how it ended.
And the story went that she lived there for a while
and sold it and it actually was inhabited,
weirdly enough, by a succession of people up until 2011.
Yeah, I mean, I guess if you're a loner
and you like nature, it's not the worst place to be.
I just saw a sunset picture that looked pretty nice.
In that sense, yes, it did.
But it's just, I mean, like the sea off of Massachusetts
can be fairly unforgiving.
So, you know, this is an old house from the 1920s.
Like you're, it's gonna probably be kind of drafty
depending on the time of year.
Yeah, and I'm sure upkeep on that thing is, you're probably repainting that thing every couple of years, right?
Yes, but you would have to paint it pink or else everybody in Newberryport would hate you.
Yeah, you would have to. Apparently that it was lived in until 2011 and then eventually
was sold to the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge in 2012, and And you can't get to it now, it's off limits to the public.
But they're trying to make it an official protected house
so it will stand forever.
And it was made out of spite or was it Chuck?
I don't know, well some people say
that that was just an urban legend
and it was just a family who lived out there.
Right, which is a much less interesting story.
So we're just gonna go with-
Yeah, no spite whatsoever.
We're gonna go with Spite House for that one.
Agreed.
All right, well, that's it for things done out of spite.
We hope you enjoyed it.
And since I said we hope you enjoyed it,
it's time for listener mail.
So another recent one from Automat,
I love this real-time stuff, this, you know, I mentioned
some sort of episode on currency and how it affects things.
And this is from Tree.
Tree, okay, awesome.
Not a tree, but tree.
Tree.
Hey guys, Chuck.
Specifically, you mentioned in the Automatt episode you were trying to formulate something
around how change affects things, or currency rather, look into the situation in Zimbabwe that might help, where
it was too expensive to import metal coins.
They had adopted the US dollar.
It was too expensive to import the metal because of weight.
So there was a huge change shortage because store owners couldn't give shoppers change.
Shoppers would have to purchase additional items to try and get their total purchase
as close to the whole dollar amount. And he sent a New York
Times article and that, my friend, Tree, is exactly what I was talking about as
something that could be a part of that episode. So I appreciate that direction
and that is specifically Tree Marchink. Great name, Tree. Tree Mark Schink from South Carolina.
Thanks a lot.
That's a good one.
And I remember, um, we talked a little bit about Zimbabwe's hyperinflation.
Oh yeah.
I remember that.
Where people were like showing up with actual wheelbarrows of cash because it was just going
nuts.
That was crazy.
I remember that.
Great, great example.
Yeah.
We've got to do that episode.
Yeah. There's, there's got to be more to it. For sure.
Well, if you want to be like Tree and fill us in on something we've said we want to know
about, we'd love that kind of thing.
You can send us an email to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
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