Stuff You Should Know - How Automats Worked

Episode Date: January 23, 2025

Once upon a time no visit to New York was complete without eating at an automat. Putting a nickel in a slot and pulling your own ham sandwich from a lit glass case thrilled people to no end. Eventuall...y the novelty wore off and automats faded into history.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:41 the scenes insights, and a deep dive into the themes that have made Yellowstone a cultural phenomenon. Our family legacy is this ranch. And I protect it with my life. Listen to the official Yellowstone podcast now on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's not here, but Chuck is and Chuck's new nickname
Starting point is 00:01:20 is Poopy McGee. Actually Pukey McGee. Not both? No. Well, that's cool. Actually, Pukey McGee. Not both? No. Let's go. Here's the story, everybody. I went to Mexico City again and got sick again, thankfully at the end. And I couldn't record yesterday, but we were in danger of missing a published date for the first time.
Starting point is 00:01:40 Yes. In 17 years? Grave danger, I would say. Like, it's Wednesday at three, and we need an episode for tomorrow at 5 a.m. Right, and we've never cut it this close. So, first of all, my friend, thank you for your flexibility. Thank you for not throwing up long enough
Starting point is 00:01:57 to record this episode. Uh, I last threw up about an hour ago. Man. And the main problem is, it's just, I've been in, like, a fugue state, man. I have nothing in my an hour ago. Man. And the main problem is it's just, I've been in like a fugue state, man. I have nothing in my body for three days now. Yeah? So I'm just like, spacey and can,
Starting point is 00:02:14 I told you on the email, you guys should love this, that like, I'll go 30 minutes where I just like, I'm just so zoned out, I can't have a, I don't even have a coherent thought for a half hour. I know. And Josh said, well, that part sounds kind of nice. It really does. Man, to be able to just turn it off. Yeah, but you know, I love that city.
Starting point is 00:02:36 I'm going to keep going back. I'm going to maybe next time drink only bottled things and not even cocktails with ice. I'm trying to figure out what's triggering me. It may just be my biome and some of the food. I don't know. You need to learn four words in Spanish. I'll have that neat.
Starting point is 00:02:53 Right. Okay? It's not a bad idea, but I'm still gonna go back. I'm gonna try it again. This may have also triggered my diverticulitis. Oh. So that may be why it's extending here into day three. I don't know, but I'm here.
Starting point is 00:03:09 And this gives us, dude, a rare opportunity to do anything newsy or like current, if you wanna mention anything. Well, that's what we're doing. We're doing an episode on automats. There's nothing more newsier current than that. That's right, Automats. And we need to give a big shout out to a documentary
Starting point is 00:03:28 called The Automat from director Lisa Hurwitz because it's great and I saw it a couple of years ago and that's what inspired this episode. But I wanted to, I didn't want to like write on the heels of this great doc, you know, kind of swoop in and do a podcast episode about it. But great documentary, it's streaming on of swoop in and do a podcast episode about it. But great documentary. It's streaming on Macs.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Highly recommend it. She did a great job. I can't wait to see what she does next. And it was a big help here. We have another other huge shout out to give. This is the first episode we're doing with help from our new writer, Laura Claussen. So yeah, welcome aboard, Laura. Laura came to us through Livia, which is all the recommendation we needed, right?
Starting point is 00:04:06 Right, exactly. And she's been great. I've been thinking, Chuck, a lot of our writers have good nicknames. Okay. Laura spells her last name like Claw, C-L-A-W, son. So I think we should call Laura Dr. Claw. Okay, I thought you were going to say the Clawster. No, Dr. Claw. Okay, I thought you were gonna say the clauster. No, Dr. Claw. It's an Inspector Gadget reference.
Starting point is 00:04:27 Dr. Oh, okay, I never watched that. Oh, good. I actually have seen it. So if you don't have a cable, but you have an antenna over there antenna, there's a station called MeTV and they just play all sorts of great reruns and everything. Well, they just launched a whole new channel
Starting point is 00:04:46 called MeTV Tunes, and they show some deep-cut tunes. I mean, like, Beetlejuice, the cartoon. There's Scooby-Doo on at 6 p.m. Eastern every day, which makes me very happy. But they show Inspector Gadget, too, and I was like, this is actually a much better cartoon than I remembered. Where... Is this in your off-grid panic room? Like where are you watching antenna TV?
Starting point is 00:05:09 Oh, no, I've got a really high tech setup. I have hijacked the coaxial cables throughout my house and I connected my outdoor antenna to the indoor cable feed so I can connect TVs throughout my house to get the reception from the outdoor antenna. That is the Josh Clarkiest thing I've ever heard. It works really well.
Starting point is 00:05:32 Yeah. I love it. Yeah. So there you go. You don't need to just stream. You can also get free TV. Heck yeah, man. I've had free TV for many, many, many, many years.
Starting point is 00:05:41 Yeah. Well, you need to be watching MeTV tunes, Chuck. All right, I'll check it out. Should we talk automats or did you have another announcement? No, no, I don't have any announcements, but I do have a question for you. OK. Chuck, have you ever eaten food?
Starting point is 00:05:58 By the way, this is going to be a tough one for me to get through for obvious reasons. Yeah, yeah. Because in the first paragraph, I saw the words oyster stew earlier and I almost vomited in my mouth. Yeah, same here, and I don't even have diverticulitis. I have not eaten food in three days,
Starting point is 00:06:14 but I used to eat food. Oh, nice, okay. Well, Chuck, then I think you would have enjoyed a trip to the Automat. That's right, and we've been at it for six minutes. We might as well go ahead and say that the Automat. That's right. And we've been at it for six minutes. We might as well go ahead and say that the Automat was a grouping of chain restaurants, self-serve restaurants, sort of like a cafeteria, but instead of being served in a
Starting point is 00:06:37 line where people would dump food on a tray, they had these walls filled with glass-fronted compartments, and you would put in some money and a slot, and you would open the door and get your piece of pie or your chicken pot pie or your pot roast or whatever have you. Yeah, your oyster stew. Yeah, but you would walk up and you'd just sit there
Starting point is 00:07:02 with your finger on your lower lip, looking from case to case, trying to figure out what appealed to you right then. Very much like you were looking at the menu, but you were looking at the actual food you were going to consume instead. So you didn't even need to be able to read to know what you wanted at this, at an automat. And then, like you said, you put your money in and you get your food out and you go sit down. And then like you said, you put your money in and you get your food out and you go sit down. And to people who first went to the automat chuck, we're talking like this is the turn of the last century when they started to take off. This was as high tech as anything got because it's really important to point out, um, in the, in like the first third, at least of the 20th century, a lot of people in the United States didn't have a refrigerator.
Starting point is 00:07:47 They might have had an icebox, but they certainly didn't have anything pumping freon through it. No, no cable TV. No, no cable TV, not even over the air antennas in some cases. No Beetlejuice the cartoon, and they also might not even have electricity
Starting point is 00:08:02 in their homes. So the idea of this futuristic, serve yourself out of a glass case that's lit kind of experience was a really big deal. And what's even more remarkable is, so okay, you're like, yeah, everybody in the 1910s was just a yokel by definition, right? Right.
Starting point is 00:08:21 These things lasted until the 1960s, and they were still viewed as these amazing places to go eat. Yeah, I mean, the last one, this is remarkable. The very last one in New York closed in 91. Yeah. Which is hard to believe. They saw a couple of sad decades,
Starting point is 00:08:38 a few sad decades before that, but we'll get to all that, but should we go to the beginning? Yeah, let's start at the beginning. That seems appropriate. And where else are we gonna go? But our old friend, Germany. Because the first automat popped up in Berlin in 1895,
Starting point is 00:08:54 and the word automat was just more of a general term for a vending machine in Germany. But it won a gold medal a couple of years later at the Brussels World Fair. Europe kinda got into them a little bit. And they spread around Europe over the next five or so years before making the leap to the United States. Yeah, and it took a little college try, I guess, the first few times for it to make that leap across the Atlantic. And it was two guys, Joseph Horn and Frank Hardart, whose last names
Starting point is 00:09:26 have become synonymous with automats. In fact, depending on what city you were in, you would probably refer to the automat as a Horn and Hardart. That's just, they were, it was like, they were like the Kleenex of automats essentially, right? Yeah. They were already in business together. They owned a chain of cafeterias in Philadelphia.
Starting point is 00:09:43 And they said, what's next? What will the future bring? And they figured out the best way to predict the future was to build it themselves. And I think they actually made a trip to Germany and found out about the automats. And they decided they wanted to bring it back to the United States. And like I said, it took a few attempts for them to actually get it to work, right? Yeah, their first one in Philly, which was the first one overall, was 1902, but the equipment, you know, because it started in Europe, was in Europe, and they tried to get some of the stuff shipped over there, you know, these big, beautiful cases
Starting point is 00:10:15 with the coin slots and the little windows and everything, and the ship sunk in the Atlantic, so they lost all that gear. They tried again again and these were victim to a warehouse fire but salvageable. They repaired that stuff. They got them up and working and they beat out their closest competitor. There was one card, Harcone, in New York that went out of business. I think it was a little fancier and H&H definitely leaned toward, as we'll see,
Starting point is 00:10:48 serving just sort of solid, affordable comfort food to the masses. Yeah. And so, Horn & Hard Art's automats, I think like you said, started in Philadelphia. And then after Harcone went out of business, Horn and Hardart kind of muscled in on that market, which is actually pretty brave, because somebody had already proven that automats may not work in New York. Right, good point. But I guess they had faith in their food.
Starting point is 00:11:16 They were like, have you tried this oyster stew? It's amazing. Stop saying that. And so they hit New York, I think, in 1912. And by 1932, 20 years later, they had 42 automats in New York City, another 20 in Philadelphia. Amazing. And H&H became the largest restaurant chain
Starting point is 00:11:36 in the entire United States. The United States was big at the time. Yeah, and this is like, that's funny by the way. this is like during the Great Depression, like people were going out of business right and left, and they actually, H&H thrived during the Depression because again, everything was really cheap, it was comforting stuff, as you'll see, the coffee was great, the food was fresh, and well, maybe not more than anything, but additionally, it was a great place to go. They were beautiful places, generally.
Starting point is 00:12:10 They were clean and they were safe. And we'll get to a bunch of other ways that they were inclusive as we go on. They were also known because they were clean and safe and you could get really good coffee for a nickel. They became places where you would just go sit and like rest your dogs or take a load off for a little while or catch your breath.
Starting point is 00:12:28 Whatever you wanted to do for a little while. And one of the reasons why people did that was because part of the allure of the automat was that there was no front of house staff generally. There were no servers. There was no maitre d, there was no manager. They, if there was a manager, they were in the back. Yeah. So you didn't feel like hustled or rushed or like
Starting point is 00:12:50 anybody was judging you for sitting there as long as you want nursing a single cup of five cent coffee. And so like automat's kind of, kind of got that reputation where you could just go chill out. And as, as big of a deal as they were in New York and Philadelphia, they actually didn't take off everywhere, even though people tried because Horn and Hardart were so successful.
Starting point is 00:13:12 Yeah, I mean, that's kind of hard to believe in a way, because they were so successful there, you would think in the other places, like of course, the obvious ones, they went to Chicago, Boston, DC, and Detroit, and some other places, but, you know, those are big cities. And it's just odd that they didn't take off there. But we do have a quote here from New York history from a guy, or an idea rather, from this guy named Nicholas Brommel who basically was like, you know what, in New York it's
Starting point is 00:13:36 so dense. And they really concentrated the restaurants around offices, like in the garment district, in the financial district, in midtown, where people were either shopping or like going to work, far less in like, you know, the quieter neighborhood streets and stuff like that. So it was just so densely packed and everyone knows how busy New York foot traffic is around those places.
Starting point is 00:14:01 And that was at least Nicholas Brommel's take on why they took off in New York and Philly. I have my own take. At the very least in Detroit, it didn't work because of the name they used for the restaurant. The Auto-Mat in Detroit was called Automatic Lunchroom Number One. I mean that's like that cereal, that's like a plain white box that says brand flakes in just black font. Yeah. Or beer, like that beer can you got me that time.
Starting point is 00:14:32 Oh, yeah. I mean, I kinda like the off-brand stuff, but yeah, that's definitely weirdly vague. That's not off-brand, that's off-brand. Awful. You wanna take a break? Yeah, let's take a break. We'll be right back. Take a break so you can go throw up.
Starting point is 00:15:04 I'm Dr. Lari Santos. And to welcome the new year, my podcast, The Happiness Lab, is releasing a series of happiness how-to guides to help you in 2025. I'll distill the wisdom of world-class experts into easy-to-digest actionable tips. It's about never feeling good enough. I feel like I'm always failing. You'll learn how to handle relationships, how to be inspiring, and how to find your purpose. We make it this big pie in the sky thing, and then of course we're all frustrated because no one knows how to get there. Struggling with tough emotions? We have a how-to guide. Worried that you're not enough? We got you.
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Starting point is 00:16:14 A.J. gives really fun and funny word puzzles to guests like me, like Ken Jennings, like Dax Shepard, and hopefully like Josh, because he would be so great on this show. Yeah, it's definitely on my to-do list. Oh, you got to be on it. It's a lot of fun. It's sort of like Wordle or Connections, but for your ears. And I think we should play everyone just a little clip. It's a puzzle that I have to convert movie titles
Starting point is 00:16:32 from the metric system back to their actual title. Oh, wow. From my second appearance on the puzzler right now. Nice. All right, so I'm going to give you a title of a movie, and you have to reconvert it to the Imperial system. All right, this is going to be great. Here we go.
Starting point is 00:16:50 The green 1.6 kilometer is. Right. I would say it's the green mile. Exactly, the green mile. So subscribe to The Puzzler with AJ Jacobs to tease your mind and tickle your funny bone. 2025 is bound to be a fascinating year. It's going to be filled with money challenges and opportunities.
Starting point is 00:17:15 I'm Joel. Oh, and I am Matt. And we're the hosts of How to Money. We want to be with you every step of the way in your financial journey this year, offering the information and insights you need to thrive financially. Yeah whether you find yourself up to your eyeballs in student loan debt or you've got a sky-high credit card balance because you went a little overboard with the holiday spending or maybe you're looking to optimize your retirement accounts so you
Starting point is 00:17:39 can retire early well how to money will help you to change your relationship with money so you can stress less and grow your net worth. That's right. How to money comes out three times a week, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays for money advice without the judgment and jargon. Listen to how to money on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey y'all, I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, host of Therapy for Black Girls, and I'm thrilled to invite you to our January Jumpstart series for the third year running. All January, I'll be joined by inspiring guests who will help you kickstart your personal
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Starting point is 00:18:59 Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, we're back. I did not throw up. I think I'm good. it's been subsiding every day in the afternoon and I feel fine. Good. And then in the morning again I'm nauseous, so that's why I think it's a diverticulitis. Man, that is awful. Are you gonna be able to record tomorrow?
Starting point is 00:19:35 We'll see. Right. No, I'll be okay, I'll be fine. Good. I'm gonna do a lot of studying after this. Okay, good. All right, so we were talking about the busyness of New York and why it worked out there. And one of the other reasons it was really popular, because like I mentioned, it was
Starting point is 00:19:51 a very clean place. They prided themselves, at least in the heyday decades. They did go downhill and kind of fall into a little bit of shabbiness. But in the heyday, they were known as being really, really, really clean, safe places. And believe it or not, at the time, there were a lot of cafeterias that, like, if you were an unaccompanied woman, they would not serve you. You had to be in there with your husband, or they just served men, like businessmen. So a woman could go in by herself, children could go in, and it wasn't like a seedy thing.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Families could feel safe and like they were in a clean place with good food. And also a lot of these are really really beautiful restaurants on the inside. Yeah they were like there was a really low likelihood that one customer was going to expose himself to the other customers. It just wasn't that kind of place right? Yeah. And like you said they are gorgeous. They were Art Deco which was the trend at the time. And they would have, some of them had like two story facades. There was a lot of marble stained glass, bronze everywhere. They had big windows that led in tons of light.
Starting point is 00:20:57 Some of them had a mezzanine upstairs dining area. Like they were huge. And then they also paid attention to details too, like that famous coffee that you were talking about. Some of them had a mezzanine upstairs dining area. Like they were huge. And then they also paid attention to details too. Like that famous coffee that you were talking about. You would put your nickel in this cool little dispenser and the coffee came out of like an Italianette dolphin's mouth. It's a beautiful, like I would love to find one of those
Starting point is 00:21:22 on eBay, just the- They're there. Oh, you can buy those? Mm-hmm. How much are they? I didn't see, but I'll get you one, just as a present for recording today, how about that? Well, I think in the, I mean,
Starting point is 00:21:34 it's been a while since I've seen the dock, but I think there was someone that is getting like the Automat machines too, and collecting and restoring them. Wow, nice. Yeah, pretty cool. Kind of like the Merv Griffin set. He just found him out back of a Burger King.
Starting point is 00:21:47 What? I never heard that. You remember in Seinfeld when Kramer found the old Merv Griffin set and he started hosting the Merv Griffin show in his apartment. That's right. Burger King will come back again in this episode, believe it or not. That's right. Um, so you said they were rigorously clean.
Starting point is 00:22:01 That was one of the things they were known for. The other thing they were known for was that their food was like really fresh. I couldn't think of a non-offensive way to put it, but it was a really fresh take on food. Yeah, I think it was as fresh as food could be for that format. Exactly. Let's say that. The coffee was super fresh. After 20 minutes, they would throw the coffee out and put new coffee in. The food, they did not sell the next day.
Starting point is 00:22:33 If you're thinking, God, what a lot of food waste because they're pre-making this stuff. We'll get to that in a sec. A little bit of genius here is they had three different day old shops in lower income neighborhoods in New York. So the next day they would sell the food there at a discount. So even if you didn't have the nickel for the piece of pie or whatever, you might be able to get it for like two or three cents the next day. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:59 Or two and a half cents. Yeah. If you could find a half cent. I'll eat a pie for a week. So I'm fine with that. For sure. As long as it hasn't fallen on the street in cents. Yeah. If you could find a half cent. I'll eat a pie for a week. So I'm fine with that. For sure. As long as it hasn't fallen on the street in public. Right.
Starting point is 00:23:09 For sure. No, no street pie. Um, and they were also known for that really good coffee, right? That came out of dolphins mouths. Um, so at the time, if you were in America, the coffee you drank, and this is the, I don't know, the 1910s, it was boiled.
Starting point is 00:23:27 And there was no filter, no nothing. So like grounds would come out. So your coffee was gritty. There was no filter again to take out any of the oils, any of the tastes. It was harsh, harsh coffee. And that's what people drank and you liked it. And you didn't complain because the coffee would
Starting point is 00:23:43 punch you in the face. If you did, it was that kind of coffee. coffee would punch you in the face if you did. It was that kind of coffee. Well, Horn and Hardart had a different take. They had a French drip, which is still makes pretty good coffee. But at the time, you had to go to New Orleans to get coffee like that.
Starting point is 00:23:58 Horn and Hardart serving the stuff in New York and Philadelphia at all of their 60 plus automats for a nickel. And every 20 minutes they throw out the old coffee and bring in fresh stuff. That's right. They sold so much coffee that they ended up losing money on it because they kept it locked into that nickel price for 38 years.
Starting point is 00:24:20 Yeah, and I did the math in 1912, which is when they hit New York, a nickel was worth $1.60 today. By 1950, it was worth 64 cents. So they started definitely losing money over time on that coffee. Yeah, for sure. So they were losing money.
Starting point is 00:24:37 They eventually had to raise the price. The only thing they could do was double it to 10 cents because their slots took nickels and their sales dropped a lot from 70 million cups a year to 45 million. They still came out on top revenue wise if you do the math but I remember watching the documentary and they were talking about this I wondered and I haven't found my way to wrap my head around how to actually do this topic, but something about change, like coins, and how they established so much commerce,
Starting point is 00:25:10 like a coin slide only taking a nickel, the only thing you can do is double it, so what does that mean to the economy? Like there's something there, but I'm just not quite sure how to frame it, so maybe somebody could help me with that. Maybe we could tie it into the idea that I had about why everything is so much more expensive now,
Starting point is 00:25:26 even relatively speaking than it used to be. Yeah, because I mean, the idea of like doubling the cost of something is crazy. Even if it's a nickel to a dime at the time, like doubling your price is just insanity for a business, but there was nothing else it could do. But even still, even doubling the price from a nickel to a dime, in 1950s money,
Starting point is 00:25:47 that was still 20 or so cents less than what they were getting for it in 1912, adjusting for inflation. So it sounds like to me, the bigger problem is that they just doubled it overnight. And again, that's all they could do because their slots only took nickels, so that's what they had to deal with.
Starting point is 00:26:06 But like you said, even still, they came out on top revenue wise. But I get the impression that there were probably a lot of grumblers over that kind of thing, who really just took super good, cheap coffee for granted and frankly shame on them. Yeah. They also sold a lot of pie. And I do remember this from the dock. Pie was a very big deal at H&H in 1964. They also sold a lot of pie, and I do remember this from the doc. Pie was a very big deal at H&H in 1964.
Starting point is 00:26:28 Here's a pretty fun stat. They sold an average of 822 pieces of pie in New York City between 8 and 11 a.m. And there are some people who said, some historians that have said that, I don't know about this, but maybe, that there was a desire for people to do things like eat pie for breakfast, but if you had to order it from a server, you might be like, oh, you know,
Starting point is 00:26:52 I can't order apple pie for breakfast. Right, because they'll have the pancakes with apples on it. Yeah, exactly, but at the automat, you could just do it on the down-low and be quiet about it. I just, I didn't know people would be judgy like that back then, but maybe. Yeah, I think every, yeah, because they were pretty proper back then too, you know?
Starting point is 00:27:10 Pie for breakfast? Yeah. Even today though, I went and looked, I was like, okay, surely our attitudes have changed. No, no they haven't. If you look up breakfast pies, it's all like, you know, breakfast stuff, but in like a pie shell
Starting point is 00:27:26 or something like that. There's no one out there eating actual pie for breakfast. It's insane. Yeah, because it's a dessert. It's a little weird. I mean, I like the idea, but it is a dessert. You can make the case that almost all breakfast foods are desserts in the United States, man. Have you heard of like IHOP? So after your steak dinner, you get a bacon, egg and cheese biscuit. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:27:53 I would. That sounds good. Although I don't like biscuits very much as a sandwich. I like a biscuit on its own. Like say a Cracker Barrel, if you get biscuits and honey, really good. But if you take that biscuit, cut it in half and put anything like an egg or cheese or something on it. I'm like, this is grody. Give me an English muffin, make it a mick.
Starting point is 00:28:13 Wow, okay. Never knew that. All right, still getting to know each other after all these years. All right, so let's talk a little bit about the nickel throwers, because if you're going to require a bunch of nickels, you're going to have to have a bunch of nickels.
Starting point is 00:28:29 And you don't often come in with a bunch of nickels as a consumer. So they had changed people. They were women, basically. They called them nickel throwers. And they just sat there all day long shoving nickels across the counter, just like when I would go to the 99 cent movie when I was a kid. They had a big stack of tickets and a big stack of pennies and they would just shove it back to you in the window.
Starting point is 00:28:54 And it was always a lot of fun, I thought. That's funny. So I guess they decided that that 99 cent price really brought people in more than a $1 movie would, huh? Maybe, and I'm curious how much they would lose in a than a $1 movie would, huh? Maybe. And I'm curious how much they would lose in a year on those pennies. I don't know. You know?
Starting point is 00:29:10 One of the things though, Chuck, did you see, I guess in the documentary, the nickel throwers and like the glass bubble-fronted things that they said and they look like fortune tellers? Yeah, it was pretty funny. But it was part of that whole ornate look to everything. Like, it's just the whole, most of those places were really pretty. Yeah, absolutely. And you know, like you said,
Starting point is 00:29:30 it conveyed a sense of the future. Like, kids loved it for that reason, because they were, it was like being in the Jetsons or something. But kids also loved it because that gave them a sense of autonomy to go in there and get a couple of nickels from their parents and to be able to walk up and pick something out.
Starting point is 00:29:46 You gotta read that Neil Simon quote, it's great. Neil Simon, I take issue with this quote, or the end of it. Oh, okay. Neil Simon, the great Neil Simon said this when he was a child about going there, or as an adult about going there as a child. To have your own stack of nickels placed in your tiny hands, to be able to choose your own food richly on display
Starting point is 00:30:05 like museum pieces, to make quick and final decisions at the age of eight, that was a lesson in financial dealings that not even two years at the Wharton School could buy today. Maybe a little hyperbole there. You think that's hyperbolic? Yeah, probably so. But it is a pretty great quote for sure. It's very sweet.
Starting point is 00:30:31 So, one of the things though is including people like Neil Simon, other people who were interviewed in the Automat documentary, people tend to remember the food as like good. And it's entirely possible it was for a while, but the older, the longer you go along in the history of the automat, the worse the food probably got for a little while. So it's not entirely clear that the food was actually good toward the end. And we can't really say because again, the last one closed in 1991. And I'm guessing by the time that one closed, it probably wasn't too good. Right. You shouldn't really compare the food in general over the course of the history of the automat to that last one, but I'm guessing it was probably pretty decent for a while based on some of the stuff
Starting point is 00:31:11 I'm reading. I bet it was pretty good if for no other reason than in the 1920s and 30s and 40s and 50s, they use real food. Right. And real ingredients, and it wasn't like it is today. So I just think by virtue of that, it was probably not bad, you know? Yeah, I'm with you. and real ingredients, and it wasn't like it is today. So I just think by virtue of that,
Starting point is 00:31:25 it was probably not bad, you know? Yeah, I'm with you. So Chuck, I say we talk about how automated the Automat really was, because it turns out, not really. It was really a facade. Literally, it was a facade of food that seemed to be mysteriously conjured out of nowhere, possibly by robots.
Starting point is 00:31:46 Yeah, and that was one of the selling points that another piece of pie on a tiny plate would pop into that window when one went out. It's not like it just stayed empty, I guess if they ran out of pie it would, or they'd probably put something else in there. But they had a huge, actually a few different central commissaries in the city where they would make all this stuff, they would ship it over there, and they had tons and tons
Starting point is 00:32:13 and tons of worker bees behind the scenes doing all that stuff. They had these rotating drums that would do the work of filling the actual slots, but there had to be someone filling those drums. So it wasn't a bunch of robots back there It was not George Jetson it was just a bunch of people plating stuff up and putting it in the drum to put in the window Yeah, so say that you went up and you're like I'm gonna have that delicious bowl of bubbling greasy oyster stew That's just sitting there looking at me in the face. I think one of those oysters might still be alive. That's how good it was, right? And you put your nickel in,
Starting point is 00:32:48 and you pulled a lever, correct? I don't remember if there was a lever, but that sounds about right. Or like you pulled a, like you were buying cigarettes as a kid when you were 14 in a coin-operated machine. That kind of lever is what I'm talking about, right? Well, I didn't like you did, but sure,
Starting point is 00:33:03 I saw the bad kids doing that. Exactly. Well I didn't like you did, but sure I saw the bad kids doing that. Exactly. Um, so you would do something like that and then either it would open like it would allow the little glass compartment window to open up so you could get your oyster stew or what have you from inside.
Starting point is 00:33:18 Um, or it might rotate a drum like you were saying so that that oyster stew was now available to you and you'd open the window and then the, there would be an open compartment in the back of the drum that somebody who was working the back of the automatic cases would see was empty and would put a new thing of oyster stew in there. And then the whole thing would just continue.
Starting point is 00:33:40 Um, I also saw that some of them had a photo of the food and that, yeah, you would like open the case and just pull it out. And then the people in back would notice that that one was empty. But suffice to say, however the food came out, there was a way to see in the rear that that compartment needed refilling.
Starting point is 00:33:58 Yeah. And one of the things Horn and Hardart was known for was employing armies of people who made sure that that food was there, that the compartments were full, and that the food was fresh too. That the Salisbury steak wasn't getting jiggly. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:34:15 I'm struggling. I'm sorry. I know you're doing it on purpose. It's all fun. That last part was a non-purpose. For a while there, they didn't have hot windows. I know you're doing it on purpose, it's all fun. That last part was a non-purpose. For a while there, they didn't have hot windows, they just had the cold windows,
Starting point is 00:34:30 so the hot food was served from a steam table, but it was not too long until they had the hot windows and the cold windows, or the hot cases probably. How they treated their workers is a matter of debate. They struck a couple of times. In 1937, they struck. They had 3,000 employees at the time. That failed. That organizing effort did not hold. Then again in 1952, they struck again. And eventual New York State Supreme Court Justice Melvin Barash was one of the people trying to organize at the time in 1952 and in 1991, he said,
Starting point is 00:35:07 the conditions were straight out of the 19th century. That effort failed. Other people, if you watch the documentary, the son of the president of the company said, no, it was great. We had company picnics and Christmas parties and like, it was really, really, really great. Daddy loved the Warkos. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:35:30 There was also an actor named Apache Ramos who is best known for playing one of the orphans in The Warriors, but also is lesser known as having managed the Fat Boys in the 80s. Oh, the Warriors, that Warriors? Yeah, like come out and play, yay. Apache Ramos, okay, I'll have to check that guy out. Oh man, he had a magnificent Afro in that movie.
Starting point is 00:35:54 Oh, yep, I totally know exactly the guy, yeah. What a great Afro. Yeah, but he also managed the Fat Boys, like the Fat Boys are back in the 80s. He worked at an automat and so did his grandmother. I'm assuming one or the other got the other one the job. But he remembered that the Horn and Hard Art would throw holiday parties for the workers' children around like Christmas time. Oh man, can you imagine how beautiful those places looked when they were decorated for Christmas parties
Starting point is 00:36:26 in like the 50s and 60s? Like, I, you know, people are like, if you could ever go back in time, what would you do? I would go to that Christmas party. Yeah, yeah, for sure. This reminds me of a childhood trauma that I suffered because growing up, my sister had a best friend whose father worked for Kraft Foods, and they had a big Kraft, like, they rented Six Flags or something.
Starting point is 00:36:52 It was some big thing every year. My brother's best friend worked for Coca-Cola, and every year they had the big Coca-Cola picnic thing. I had nobody, and I never got to go, every single year. I had to watch Scott and Michelle go to the craft event and the Coke event. Man, that's terrible. Yeah, it just, it still sticks with me after all these years.
Starting point is 00:37:13 Your friend Richie was like, well, my dad owns the tire shop, so you can come to that. We don't really have a party, but we stand around. Right. Should we take another break? Yeah. All right, should we take another break? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:26 All right. We'll take another break and talk about the inclusivity of the automat right after this. I'm Dr. Laurie Santos and to welcome the new year, my podcast, The Happiness Lab, is releasing a series of happiness how-to guides to help you in 2025. I'll distill the wisdom of world-class experts into easy-to-digest actionable tips. It's about never feeling good enough. I feel like I'm always failing. You'll learn how to handle relationships, how to be inspiring, and how to find your purpose. We make it this big pie in the sky
Starting point is 00:38:08 thing and then of course we're all frustrated because no one knows how to get there. Struggling with tough emotions, we have a how-to guide. Worried that you're not enough? We got you. Self-obsessed and want to get over yourself? There's a guide for that too. The ability to approach somebody and make them experience desire for you in minutes or even hours is a rare and rather unnecessary skill, historically speaking. The Happiest Labs How-To Season starts January 1st. Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. 2025 is bound to be a fascinating year.
Starting point is 00:38:45 It's going to be filled with money challenges and opportunities. I'm Joel. Oh, and I am Matt. And we're the hosts of How to Money. We want to be with you every step of the way in your financial journey this year, offering the information and insights you need to thrive financially. Yeah. Whether you find yourself up to your eyeballs in student loan debt or you've got a sky-high credit card balance because you went
Starting point is 00:39:07 a little overboard with the holiday spending or maybe you're looking to optimize your retirement accounts so you can retire early. Well, How to Money will help you to change your relationship with money so you can stress less and grow your net worth. That's right. How to Money comes out three times a week, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, for money advice without the judgment and jargon. Listen to How to Money on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:39:36 Hey everybody, Chuck and Josh here, and I was recently a guest once again on one of my favorite podcasts. It's called The Puzzler with Old Pal and friend of the show, AJ Jacobs. AJ gives really fun and funny word puzzles to guests like me, like Ken Jennings, like Dax Shepard, and hopefully like Josh,
Starting point is 00:39:52 because he would be so great on this show. Yeah, it's definitely on my to-do list. Oh, you gotta be on it. It's a lot of fun. It's sort of like Wordle or Connections, but for your ears. And I think we should play everyone just a little clip. It's a puzzle that I have to convert movie titles
Starting point is 00:40:04 from the metric system back to their actual title Oh, wow from my second appearance on the puzzler right now. Thanks. All right, so I'm gonna give you a title of a movie Mm-hmm, and you have to reconvert it to the Imperial system All right. This is gonna be great. Here we go. The green 1.6 kilometer is. Right. I would say it's the green mile. Exactly, the green mile. So subscribe to The Puzzler with AJ Jacobs
Starting point is 00:40:34 to tease your mind and tickle your funny bone. Hey y'all, I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, host of Therapy for Black Girls, and I'm thrilled to invite you to our January Jumpstart series for the third year running. All January, I'll be joined by inspiring guests who will help you kickstart your personal growth with actionable ideas and real conversations. We're talking about topics like building community and creating an inner and outer glow. I always tell people that when you buy a handbag, it doesn't cover a childhood scar.
Starting point is 00:41:07 You know, when you buy a jacket, it doesn't reaffirm what you love about the hair you were told not to love. So when I think about beauty, it's so emotional because it starts to go back into the archives of who we were, how we want to see ourselves and who we know ourselves to be and who we can be. So a little bit of past, present and future all in one idea, soothing something from the past. And it doesn't have to be always an insecurity. It can be something that you love.
Starting point is 00:41:31 All to help you start 2025 feeling empowered and ready. Listen to Therapy for Black Girls starting on January 1st on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay Chuck, just before we took a break, you nailed it on the head. You said we were talking about the inclusivity of the automat, and in particular, the Horn and Harder automat, which again, they were synonymous with automat. They were one of the earliest chain restaurants in the United States to integrate, not discriminate against their clientele. Not just, you know, like unescorted women, God forbid, but also racially speaking, economically speaking,
Starting point is 00:42:29 like whoever came to a Horn and Harder automate to eat was treated equally, and that was huge. I mean, we're talking starting in the 1910s. That was an enormous deal, and that's something that, I mean, my hat's off to them for that. Yeah, for sure. They had a motto which was serve everybody and serve everybody in the same way, which is a great quote.
Starting point is 00:42:51 And Colin Powell, former Secretary of State, is in the documentary. And it's a great, really sweet interview. And he said, the one we would usually go to is the automat on 42nd Street. I never even thought about the fact that I'm a black kid. Should I go into horn and hard art? Is it okay to go to the Auto Mat?
Starting point is 00:43:10 All the Auto Mat's had that beautiful diversity that didn't exist in most of the rest of the country of economic standing, of color, of ethnicity, of language. You never knew what you'd run into in an Auto Mat. Yeah, it's pretty cool. There was also a historian named Lisa Keller, I believe in the documentary, pointed out that if you were an immigrant,
Starting point is 00:43:31 this was a great place for you to go because you just went and looked at the food and put your nickel in, you didn't really have to be able to read or speak English and you could still get a good meal of oysters too. I can't wait to see what Aaron Cooper does with this. They were also known for their celebrity fans. There was one very famous Esquire spread.
Starting point is 00:43:53 Of course, this is for Esquire, so it was all set up. But in 1951, Audrey Hepburn was a photograph for Esquire. So cute. Shopping at an automat, very cute. But in the documentary, Reiner and Brooks, Carl Reiner, in 1951 Audrey Hepburn was a photographer Esquire. So cute. Shopping at an Auto Mat, very cute. But in the documentary, Rainer and Brooks, Carl Rainer and Mel Brooks love the Auto Mat and they talk with great adoration
Starting point is 00:44:13 about their childhood of going to those restaurants. Yeah, and James Dean, his favorite baked beans in the world were Horn and Hard Arts baked beans. James Bean more like. That's right. He really knew what he was talking about, too. That's how he died in that car accident. He was eating some baked beans at the time
Starting point is 00:44:31 and lost control of the steering wheel. God. That's not true, everybody. We did a short stuff on it, so. Yeah, exactly. Don't at me. So I guess we're at the sad point, like so many of these episodes that we do on a cool thing from the past where the decline begins.
Starting point is 00:44:48 The 1960s is when that started, although they were still like a huge deal culturally, you know, everyone knew about the automat. And I don't think we mentioned, you know, at a certain point in New York City, they were so famous that it was like when you go to visit New York, you would go to an automat just for that experience. Right, like how, like when we were kids, you went to that city's like hard rock cafe to get the t-shirt. Remember that? Oh man, totally. You wear it with your Panama Jackson glasses
Starting point is 00:45:14 and everybody at home would be like, you had a great summer, obviously. Oh yeah, my band did a one gig at the hard rock cafe here in Atlanta one time. Wowee, did they put your guitar up under a glass case afterwards? They did. Pretty sweet.
Starting point is 00:45:28 They should. But the 60s is where things really started to struggle, even though they were, again, still popular culturally. Stockholders were involved by that point, obviously. Just revenues started dropping. The suburbs was a big cause of it, you know, when people started moving out to the suburbs, offices and office complexes started getting built
Starting point is 00:45:51 in the suburbs and people started shopping at malls in the suburbs and there were fewer and fewer people just, you know, walking around New York, doing things like shopping and going to their office. So it just, it started to sort of slowly drop and slowly drop until they got a little weird with some of their ideas, right? Yeah, Wild West Room, I could not find a picture of that.
Starting point is 00:46:13 But apparently one of the automats, this one in Times Square, they put a Wild West Room in, in 1966, I mean, I'm sure people would have gone crazy for that in 1966. Not a wild restroom. That's every restroom in New York City. There's like a ton of potted plants and a tiger in there. Right. They also tried a beer garden.
Starting point is 00:46:32 They tried the roller skate waiters thing. They tried, you know, live bands and dancing and stuff like that. But eventually Horn and Harder looked at each other and they said, well, this is clearly seen its best days. The silver lining is, is we are sitting on a bunch of really valuable real estate. I know like 40 buildings in Manhattan. Yeah. So don't feel too bad. They were doing okay. No, but instead of selling them, they said, hey, I've got an idea.
Starting point is 00:47:00 Let's remove the AutoMat and put Burger Kings in instead. There you have it. Get new franchises. So that's where you would have gotten your old Auto-Mat cases is in the back of a Burger King. I was just about to improvise one of those terrible, terrible, terrible, terrible Burger King commercial songs. That's one of the big drawbacks to watching
Starting point is 00:47:21 MeTV tunes. Oh, is that on there too? There's this one Burger King ad that keeps playing over and over and over again. I had to hit myself in the knee with a hammer to get it out of my head. Well, it's this whole new campaign with a guy that's singing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:35 That can't sing. Please don't do it. No, no, no. That's like my oysters too. Well, I guess I won't do a song right now. Oh, man. Actually, I know exactly why now we're even Exactly. So yeah, I guess you can just if you can mute the the
Starting point is 00:47:52 The TV fast enough then you can keep watching me TV tunes. Yeah. Yeah. All right, so Burger Kings went in Automats were going downhill. Another thing that happened was as they started going downhill, different kind of shoppers started coming in there, people that were itinerant, people that were unhoused, people that were vagrants and just sort of coming through town who knew that they could hang out there for that nickel cup of coffee for hours and hours and hours. And when that starts happening, families stop coming in and it just creates this sort of vicious cycle where your clientele is different
Starting point is 00:48:30 and it's not seen as that safe middle class space any longer. No, and those same families, they're like, oh, let's go down to the automat step in and they're like, oh, it's seedy here. So they stopped coming in, which just reinforced the ability of the homeless population to hang out in Horn and Hard Art. Horn and Hard Art's whole thing was serve everybody and serve everybody
Starting point is 00:48:49 the same way. So as far as I ever saw, they weren't exactly rousting vagrants who were hanging out drinking like a cup of coffee. And it just, it just was basically the same story as the inner city in the United States in the 60s and 70s. Once the suburbs rose and everybody moved out of there and the neighborhoods and the communities that did survive had U.S. interstates built right through their neighborhoods, things just took a turn for the worse and the automat was not immune to that whole thing. Yeah. Another big part of that is like these,
Starting point is 00:49:26 this huge central commissary kitchens where they were cooking all this stuff is an excellent, excellent, efficient way to do it when you are booming with business. Right. Once business drops and you're not cooking, you're not needing to cook as much, all of a sudden the economy of scale isn't there any longer
Starting point is 00:49:44 and you have these huge places with fewer employees and less food being pumped out. And it was just a downward spiral. Very sad. Yeah. So the other thing too is it's interesting and I think it's kind of appropriate that Horn and Hard Art got into fast food franchises because the automat kind of helped lay the, the foundation for that.
Starting point is 00:50:09 But rather than hundreds of different dishes, which is apparently what Horn and Hard Art offered at each of their automats. Um, you know, fast food has like 10 and like, yes, you can have it your way, but really you can have it your way choosing from these five ingredients or whatever. Um, and the, the, there were much like downscale, like surroundings. It was just like the automats vision
Starting point is 00:50:33 with all of the glitz and idealism removed from it. Then you have fast food franchises. Yeah, basically. That last one that closed in 91, it was the last one starting in 1977 at 200 East 42nd Street, so right there, sort of near Times Square. Sure.
Starting point is 00:50:52 And it lasted 14 years on its own as a nostalgia piece, basically, before becoming a Gap. That's right, it's a Gap. What else? So, like you said, if you went to New York, like you would go to the Empire State Building, you might go see a Broadway play and you would go eat at an Auto Mat. That's just how iconic it was, right? It popped up, like anytime you're trying to get across how New York your movie was, like there would be a scene in an automat or something like that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:26 Francis Ford Coppola apparently directed a movie in the 60s that featured an automat called Automat Now. It showed up in, I'm kidding. It showed up in like- I get it now, I'm a little slow and foggy. Hey, I think you're doing magnificent for considering what you've been through the last couple days, man. I've been through apocalypse now.
Starting point is 00:51:48 Bugs Bunny went to an automat and the hair grows in Manhattan. That's right. The Flintstones, they even had a Flintstone automat in a 1962 episode. And there's a book that I think I've heard of but I'd never read from the mixed up files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.
Starting point is 00:52:05 That sounds familiar. Well, the thing that sounds familiar to me is that these kids hide out living in the Met, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. That's Royal Tana Bombs. That's, yeah, I guarantee that was an homage to that then. But anyway, in this children's book, these kids are runaways and they live in a Met.
Starting point is 00:52:29 That's the Met, right? The Met isn't the opera house, it's the art museum? The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the Met, yeah. Okay, right. Well, one of the things that they do is they feed themselves by going to the Auto Met. Oh, that's fun. And I did not know, he totally, yeah, let's call it an homage.
Starting point is 00:52:46 You're kinder than I am. Oh, yeah, Wes Anderson does not rip stuff off. He lovingly pays homage to it. That's right, that's right. Pat Boone tried his version of the Automat called the Dynomat in 1962, which was frozen food that was then microwaved. That did not work out too well.
Starting point is 00:53:05 That's surprising. But there were a few other things over the years that were tried like this, that did not take off like the AutoMat did. My favorite was the Andy Mat. Yeah, what's up with that? Andy Warhol, this is just what an artist he was. He could just talk about it.
Starting point is 00:53:18 He just mentioned something in passing, and people are still talking about it 50 years later. But he said that he was gonna come up with the the chain of Andi mats, which are like auto mats, but instead of having to go get your food from a case, you would sit down on like a red mohair banquette and order through a pneumatic tube and you would order frozen food and champagne. That's what he was going to at the Ande-Madd. Oh, that's funny.
Starting point is 00:53:46 But that never happened at all, right? Just an idea. No, it didn't. But there's some people who are trying to revive it. Yeah, I mean, there are things like this. I mean, Japan has stuff like this, right? They have what's called Katin Zushi. Okay, what's that?
Starting point is 00:54:00 It's the sushi that comes around in a conveyor belt. No, but I've seen little windows as well of things. It may not be hot food, maybe it's other things. Yeah, I'm sure that they do. I remember going to Toledo Hospital to visit my mom when she was at work and they had basically Auto-Mat sandwiches. I always just thought it was like a-
Starting point is 00:54:19 Like a vending machine? A vending machine, yeah, but no, it was an Auto-Mat basically. Yeah, there's a place in Brooklyn called the Brooklyn Dumpling Shop. I think there are like 12 of them here in Canada and they, I just looked up a picture of them and they had these little automap kind of like cubbies
Starting point is 00:54:36 that you order through an app, like a locker system. And I've also seen, I think it was a Shark Tank product that I ended up seeing in a hotel where it's like a machine that gives you like a cheeseburger or a pizza, like, but made to order. So like you can say what kind of pizza you want and it'll, it's just got this machine inside that'll, you know, load it up with whatever
Starting point is 00:54:57 and then bake it and then it spits it out in 15 minutes or whatever. So things kind of like this, but not truly automat stuff. One of the things you can choose for that pizza maker is I don't want the cheese to scald the roof of my mouth. And the pizza machine's like yeah yeah sure sure definitely not. And then they have a hidden camera on you. Right. And spit out a picture of you going ah! Yeah. Damn it. You got anything else? I have nothing else. I don't think I have to puke. I think this is the best I've felt in a few days, so hopefully that holds.
Starting point is 00:55:31 That makes me feel good about the effect I have on you. Yeah. Just a little Josh, a little side cup of oyster stew, and back on my feet again. There you go. Well, since Chuck's back on his feet again, obviously anyone who's ever listened to this show before knows that he just unlocked listener mail. That's right. This is short and sweet. This is kind of fun because this is coming out tomorrow and it's a correction on an episode that was just out.
Starting point is 00:55:59 Awesome. So maybe for a change we won't get like 400 emails from crafters. Okay. Oh yeah. Hey guys. RE, the high times episode and Martha Stewart. Hodgepodge is a big jumble of things that don't go together. Modgepodge is the craft supply.
Starting point is 00:56:14 Just don't want you to embarrass yourselves at the craft store. That is from Kelly. Modgepodge is what you use to glue together a big jumble of things that don't go together. Exactly. That's great Kelly. Thank you and to the other a big jumble of things that don't go together. Exactly. That's great, Kelly. Thank you and to the other thousand of you who wrote in. It's nice to know that there are people out there still using Modge Podge. It's fun.
Starting point is 00:56:34 Yeah. I mean, it's fun to say. And it's got a cute label too. Yeah. Modge Podge is really a lot of fun. I enjoy it. For sure. And we heard from Martha Stewart too.
Starting point is 00:56:42 She said, yes, I have Mod Podge laying around. Thank Jerry got in touch with her and asked. That's right. Well, if you want to be like who? Kelly. If you want to be like Kelly and write in to gently correct us, we love that kind of thing. You can send it via email to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Do you want to see into the future?
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