Stuff You Should Know - How Yo-Yos Work
Episode Date: January 3, 2012You may have played with a yo-yo before -- perhaps you've even walked the dog -- but do you know about the physics behind what makes a yo-yo sleep and wake up? Learn all about inertia, angular momentu...m and the history of the yo-yo in this episode of SYSK. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. It's Charles W. Chuck Bryant. That's me. Same as
ever. Scratching the old back. Yeah, just got a little itch there. You ever use one of those
little dealies, the little creepy hand, the little monkey paw on the end of that stick?
I have before. Yeah. I don't like to do that. It hurts. Oh yeah? I guess you could call it.
It's a painful sensation. I get up against the wall sometimes and do the
balloon, the bear trick. That'll do sometimes too. But it's weird. I only have back hitches in
about the same place and that would be on my left shoulder blade on the western side of it,
depending on which direction I'm facing. Curiously, this is going to be the most interesting part
of this show. That is not true, Chuck, man. So, Chuck. Yes. This is going to be a great one.
Okay. I have a feeling this can be one of those ones where it's like, wow, that turned out to be
really good. It's physics heavy out the union. Yeah, everyone loves that. But the fact is,
when we finish this, you're going to know how Yo-Yo works. This is probably the most
truly titled, truest titled episode we've ever done. You think? Yeah. I don't know. All right.
Well, we'll find out. I think it should be called physics through the eye of a Yo-Yo.
So, listen. Have you ever seen the movie Harlem Nights?
Parts. Dude. That is, go back and watch it again. I've watched the whole thing. Oh, you're crazy.
It's one of the best movies ever. Eddie Murphy, Red Fox, Richard Pryor. Great cast. And like
everybody else in it too. I think Bernie Max in there. Awesome cast. Terrible script. I don't
think the script is terrible. I thought it was great. There's one thing about that movie that
bugged me to know it. It's set in like the 20s, right? Yeah. And throughout the movie,
Eddie Murphy uses the word Yo. Yo is obviously a modern term. And it just sticks out like a
sore thumb every time he does. It drives me crazy. Like, it drives me crazy that he did.
It drives me crazy that the director wasn't like, you can't say Yo. This is like 1920s New York.
Yo wasn't around. I don't know that they were going for historical accuracy in that one.
They were wearing spats. Yeah. So Jerry liked that one. So I went back and did a little digging
chuck and it turns out that Yo was in fact around in the 1920s. But Eddie Murphy was still wrong
for using it in that capacity. Okay. Okay. So Yo goes back at least to like the 15th century
as like a hunting cry, right? When somebody was like, somebody else might go Yo. And you go chase
Fox. That was kind of the first wave of Yo. As far back as 1859, we know that there were sailors
that were using it. Yo ho ho. Yo ho ho. Or also, it was a response for a roll call, like Yo,
like somebody called your name, you would say Yo. Aki. It wasn't until after World War II, though,
that the modern incarnation comes. And it came out of the Italian quarters of Philadelphia.
Of course it did. So that's where they think Yo came from after World War II. Hence, Eddie Murphy
was wrong in using Yo, especially frequently in the movie Harlem Nights. So I did all that
research, or I could have just looked into Google Translate from English to
Filipino or vice versa. Okay. And find that it just means come. Yeah, but I don't think that's
what it means here, does it? It does now. Okay. So the word Yo-Yo, as it stands, right means come,
come or come back. Yeah, that makes sense. Did you know that? I did. All right. You want to talk
a little bit about the history of Yo-Yo's? Did you know before reading this fantastic article
that Yo-Yo's originated, as we understand them now, originated in the Philippines in the 1920s?
I didn't know that. I did know that it was around for a long time before that, though,
in other forms. Well, pretty much the same form. There were like two forms of Yo-Yo's in history.
Yeah. And one came out of, the new one came out of the Philippines. The other one is pretty old.
Well, ancient Chinese, or at least ancient Greeks, more than 2,500 years ago.
Yo-Yo, but they think the Chinese had something similar to that. Yeah, I'm starting to strongly
suspect that the Chinese are the origin of human civilization. They came up with beer.
Well, they came up with beer. There you have it. They went right there.
And it is the oldest toy on the planet except the doll, the dolly. I thought that was pretty
interesting, too. Of course. Although, I wonder if they're kind of diminishing any kind of ancient
rituals or rites by saying, like, look at this cute doll. And really, it's some sort of fetish.
I don't know. You never know. So, it's been around a long time. They've designed it in
different ways over the years. The original design had the string tied tight to the little
axis there. We'll call it the Greek design. The Greek design? No, we'll call it the Chinese design.
Or the European design. Well, not design, but it was popular in Europe. And that, obviously,
if you ever used an old Yo-Yo like that or redesigned yours to where it's tied around the
axle, it'll pop up. As soon as you throw it down, it'll pop back up because it's tied to the axle.
Exactly. And you said it was popular in Europe. There were other words for it, other names for
the Yo-Yo before it was a Yo-Yo. That's right. There was the lemigrette, the bandalore. The
bandalore is British, I believe. The quiz? Yeah, I didn't get a country of origin for that.
But it was very popular in Europe. There's a painting of, I think, Louis the 18th.
Is he the boy king? I don't know. Whichever Louis was the boy king of him holding like a Yo-Yo.
Like a royal painting of him with a Yo-Yo. Or the, what was it, a little hoop on and a stick?
I think that's what it's called. That was an awesome game. The hoop on a stick.
And then, I don't think you can compare the Yo-Yo to the hoop on a stick. No, I'm not comparing.
I'm just saying I just never got that toy. Oh, okay. Well, here's another one for you.
Napoleon was well known for carrying and using a Yo-Yo, apparently for stress relief.
Oh yeah? Yeah. It didn't work too well. Here's a stressed out dude. Yeah. He needed the Yo-Yo.
But as you said, that's the European favored or Chinese design where like the strings tied
really tight to the axle and it just basically goes up and down. Yeah. Right? So the Filipino
design led to the modern Yo-Yo as we understand it now. And the huge distinction is that the string
is just looped around the axle kind of loosely. Yeah. Which has the added benefit of allowing the
Yo-Yo itself to spin once it reaches the end of the string. Yeah. Sleep. That's why people
Yo-Yo, I think. Yeah. It's all about the tricks. I mean, it's sort of fun for a minute just to
go up and down, but it's really all about the tricks. Right. It's just a stress relief if it
just goes up and down. Did you Yo-Yo when you were a kid? Yeah, here or there. But even as a kid,
like I could sense that like these new modern ones that we'll talk about like ball bearings and
clutches, they just seem like cheating. I agree. Let's not even talk about them. It's not even a
real Yo-Yo. So Chuck, you want to talk about a little bit about physics? Well, let's finish the
history first, shall we? Oh, okay. Well, I have plenty of that. It was originally in the Philippines,
they think it was a hunting weapon for like 400 years. So, but not like a little tiny Yo-Yo.
They were really big and it was basically a big spindle attached to a rope with like
spikes coming off of it. They were like the size of a Ugo. Yeah. And I guess the just the benefit
there is that you could get it back after you threw it at somebody. Right. The string was almost
just useless though. Well, I could just throw it and run after it. Oh, really? Okay. It was actually
heavy rope and they used it for hunting too. Right. Well, at some point down the line, well, yeah,
you would think anything used in hunting, you know, does double duty and more. Exactly. Anything
you're trying to kill. Yeah. At some point though, they became smaller and became toys.
And in the 20s, a Filipino immigrant to the U.S. named Pedro Flores started a company, the first
modern Yo-Yo company in the United States and did pretty well for himself. And then in 1929,
he sold out to a man named Duncan. Right. Donald Duncan. Yes. Donald Duncan. And Duncan. And
you know, Flores is in Santa Barbara. And like you said, was selling these things like hotcakes.
And up that Duncan said, Hey, let me buy that. I'm going to keep the name Yo-Yo because it's
catchy. Yeah. I'm going to trademark it. And now I own it. And through the years, he had competitors
that made similar devices with different names and they were like, dude, everyone's calling
this thing a Yo-Yo. Right. We want to be able to call it a Yo-Yo too. And he said, no, no, I own it.
Then the federal courts in 1965 says, you know what? That's generic enough now where you don't
own it any longer. Right. They're all Yo-Yos. Well, what those legal challenges to their trademark,
the name Yo-Yo, was one of the things that bled the company dry. It eventually went bankrupt.
Duncan, the Duncan company went bankrupt. Yeah. The same year they ruled. Yeah. Against them.
They were like, well, that's it for us. But they also had other money troubles. They were actually
victims of their own success. The Duncan company was. So they moved in the 40s to Luck, Wisconsin,
which very quickly became known as the Yo-Yo capital of the world. And at their peak, they were
making 3,600 Yo-Yos an hour. Wow. Mostly out of wood at first. Maple. They're using a million
board feet of maple wood every year. Yeah, it's a lot. And they actually, in addition to their
legal challenges, like the money going to fight their legal battles, they were paying tons of
money in overtime to advertising. And as a matter of fact, I think in 1962, Chuck, they managed to
sell 45 million Yo-Yos. And in that same year, there were only 40 million kids in the US. Wow.
That's pretty astounding. A chicken in every pot and a Yo-Yo in every other hand, at least.
Yeah. Sure. Well, I guess some kids were Yo-Yos with both hands. They're rich kids. Yeah. But like I
said, the company ended up going bankrupt anyway. But Yo-Yo enthusiasts still look very fondly on
the Duncan name. And I think June 6th, yes, June 6th is National Yo-Yo Day, which happens to be the
same day as Donald Duncan's birthday. Yeah. Yeah. Well, and the Duncan name lives on. Obviously,
you still see Duncan Yo-Yos. They sold out. They didn't just shut down. Well, they went bankrupt
and sold out, right? Yeah. Yeah. So it was the Flambelle Plastics Company. Yeah. They said,
we'll keep the name Duncan because it's synonymous with Yo-Yos. Yeah. It's not generic yet. No.
There's a little Yo-Yo history for you. Yeah. I got a little more I'm going to say to the end.
I think you'll like. Okay. I'm going to tease you with it. Now let's talk about physics. Well,
I think this is very interesting. Good. So there's two. Okay. You mentioned with the string tied to
the classic Chinese design Yo-Yo. You have one kind of energy going on, right? Yes. And that is
linear momentum, the ability of it to go up and down, or I should say down and up, right? That's
right. With the Filipino design, the modern design, it has two kinds of potential energy.
It has that same linear momentum to go up and down, but it also has angular momentum,
and angular momentum is its ability to spin on an axle. Yeah. Okay. So you got two things going on.
And like you said, when the Yo-Yo hits the end of the line of its linear momentum,
it can still, it's built up since it's wound around the spool. Yeah. It's built up a lot of
angular momentum so it can just sit there and spin or sleep as you called it. Yeah. It actually
increases as it goes down, which is the key to keeping it spinning. Right. It gets faster as it
falls. There's another pretty cool trait to a Yo-Yo. Who knew they were so complex? I didn't.
Did you? I did not. Okay. So they also have gyroscopic stability, Chuck.
They do. Okay. So if you have a Yo-Yo that's sleeping and you push down on top of it,
like it goes down and then back up. Right. That's because of its gyroscopic stability.
That point that you push down on the Yo-Yo is transferred from the front and spun around to
the back so that even now, so the Yo-Yo will just keep spinning as long as it's spinning fast enough.
Gyroscopic stability. Yes. That means a spinning object will resist change to its axis of rotation
and if you've ever thrown a football, it's the same thing. Yeah. Or if you've ever thrown a football
poorly, what do they call that? A wobbler, a turkey. Wounded duck, brick. That's why a wounded duck
doesn't go very far because it doesn't have that tight spin. Yeah. So it falls off its axis and
won't travel as far. Exactly. Same as a frisbee. And then the whole team's managing. Basically
anything that spins, frisbees, footballs, there's got to be a baseball. We could liken it to a
baseball somehow. Let's say a curveball. Knuckleball. Slider. Definitely not a knuckleball. Slider.
It doesn't spin at all. Really? Is it like a shot put? No. The knuckleball, the whole key is
it doesn't move. It travels like this and that's why it moves all around. Crazy. Isn't that nutty?
Yeah. So you've got your Yo-Yo sleeping. You're totally aware of its gyroscopic stability
and you understand that its angular momentum is just awesome. It's far out, right? It's far out.
But you want to wake it up and that's when you bring it out of its sleep and rewind it back
up the spool, right? A little tug on the old finger. Yeah. And the reason why is because the loop,
right, there's less friction with the loop around the axle. Yeah. When you tug it,
you increase that friction and you allow it to rewind. It just grabs a hold of its buddy and
just let's go back up to the palm. Yeah, it's pretty cool. Yeah. I like Yo-Yo physics a lot.
The war on drugs impacts everyone whether or not you take drugs. America's public enemy number
one is drug abuse. This podcast is going to show you the truth behind the war on drugs. They told
me that I would be charged for conspiracy to distribute 2200 pounds of marijuana. Yeah,
and they can do that without any drugs on the table. Without any drugs, of course, yes,
they can do that. And I'm the prime example of that. The war on drugs is the excuse our government
uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff. Stuff that'll piss you off. The property is guilty.
Exactly. And it starts as guilty. It starts as guilty. The cops, are they just like looting?
Are they just like pillaging? They just have way better names for what they call like what we
would call a jackmove or being robbed. They call civil asset for it. Be sure to listen to the war
on drugs on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Who do we become when we travel? I have never flown without wearing a suit in time.
I refuse to do it. Who are we allowed to be? Those blue American passports,
as powerful as they are, it doesn't work the same for everyone. And where is everybody going?
I do love to sit near the ocean and drink. Join me, Brendan Francis Nunum for Not Lost
Chat, a new season of the travel podcast that the New York Times, the Economist, and the Atlantic
named Best of the Year. In each episode of the new season, I'll share an audio postcard from
where I've been, talk to a travel writer about their work, and invite a famous frequent flyer
to come by and answer your travel questions. If I'm sitting in the seat and the person beside me
is acting irate, I'm going to call a flight attendant before I stick my size 13 foot
up their tiny ass. Ah, the joys of air travel. Listen to Not Lost on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. So we basically just talked about the two hardest
parts, right? Sleeping and waking. Yeah, and like I said, sleeping is the key to do any kind of trick,
like walking the dog, which I was pretty good. I used to do a few yo-yo tricks. Really? Yeah,
I could walk the dog and I could do the deal where you make a triangle and then tick-tock
through the triangle. Something like a cradle or probably the cats in the cradle. Let's call
a cat's cradle. And then I could do the around the world. Wow, around the world. Yeah, I couldn't
do any of those. This inspired me to get a new yo-yo, by the way. I like the vintage Duncan
ones, specifically the yellow ones with the butterfly, like the gold butterfly. The inverted ones?
No, the ones that looked like a butterfly that were inverted, and I think that actually plays
a part in the increasing the moment of inertia section. Yeah, I think that's why they flipped
it out to put more weight on the outside. Yeah, okay, you want to talk about that? Why not? So
do you remember when we did the Murphy's Law podcast? How could I forget? Remember one of the
books that he wrote was for your moments of inertia? Yeah. Yeah, I didn't realize it was
a terrible, terrible engineering pun until I read this article. Yeah, and maybe hate John Paul
Stapp a little bit. Nah, we love that guy. So Chuck, a moment of inertia is basically a way of
describing a spinning object's resistance to changes in that rotation, basically being slowed down.
Yeah. Right? And what smarter people than us have figured out is that if you increase the mass
and distribute it slightly further away from the axis, you're going to increase its moment of inertia.
Right. And that increases the amount of time it's just sleeping, right? Yeah, and like I said,
I don't know this, but I just remember when I was a kid, they had those inverted yo-yos, and I
bet you anything that's why they did that. It's got to be. Because they were wider at the outside
and then curved in, which had to be less mass. Yeah. It was less stuff, less wood. Right. So I'm
going to go on record as saying that's why they did that. But I think you want more mass further
away. Yeah. To increase its moment of inertia, right? Yeah. So it was, there was more mass on
the outside, further away from the axis. Right. Yeah. So that allows things to sleep a lot longer.
And that was a, I guess you could say one of the breakthroughs in yo-yo design. I think in the
60s, they started adding mass to the outside and extending the axle a little bit. Bam. The yo-yo's
been improved. Think about this, right? 2,500, maybe even longer than that years ago. Yeah.
Somebody invented the yo-yo, does not change until the Philippines in the early 20th century.
Well, I thought it said it did change. We just don't know. So there were changes in design
over the years. No. Not that I took. I took it like there was one way and then there was the
Filipino way. And that was it. We got a correction to make then. And then the 20th century hits,
and then there's all these great improvements on these designs. Indeed. One of the improvements,
Chuck, was adding ball bearings, right? Yeah. So you and I don't think these are improvements.
Or at least I don't. Okay. That's absolutely true. That's a good caveat. I think that the
Filipinos perfected the yo-yo. Let's just call them modifications. Okay. For sorry kids who don't
know how to yo-yo. Rich kids. Yeah. That makes it easier, I think. Yeah. Isn't that the whole point
of both of these things? Yeah, I guess. It makes it easier to sleep. Yeah. And I guess they're like,
well, if you're just enjoying sleeping and waking your yo-yo, then why make it tough? If you want
to have fun with your toy. Right. I can't believe they made it easier for kids to have fun. How
dare they? So the ball bearing design, I think, is kind of clever. Basically,
this modification takes the axle and splits it in two. Yeah. Into two races, which are basically
little courses for ball bearings to spin around. Now, does it split the axle? These are just around
the axle. So one is connected to the axle. Right. That's the inner race. One is connected to the
string. That's the outer race. And then in between the two are ball bearings. Right. Okay.
They're not connected in any way, except maybe via the context with the ball bearings. Right.
So when you release your yo-yo toward the ground and it's linear and angular momentum really build
up, when it hits, the inner race can tilt a little bit and connect with the outer race via the ball
bearings. So they're spinning. Right. And then as they straighten out, they're not connected anymore
so that the string no longer has any effect on whether the yo-yo spins or not, because it's
just the inner race connected to the axle that's spinning. So your yo-yo can sleep far, far longer.
Yeah. The outer race spins the inner race, which spins the axle. Right. It's like a transfer of
angular momentum. Exactly. And then the string is like, you just let me know when you're done
and we'll wind back up. Well, it'll give a little toggle to the same thing with that
style, right? Right. Okay. Or you can just completely take yourself out of the equation
altogether except for a snap of the wrist. The initial release is all you need to do with what's
called the yo-yo with the brain. These are really fake yo-yos. Yeah. I want to get one though. It's
kind of cool. I think you could be in a vegetative state and do this yo-yo. Yeah. This was in the 90s
company called Yomega released these and they called it the yo-yo with the brain when in fact
they should have called it the yo-yo with the clutch. And the deal here is you've got these
two clutch arms, weighted ball on one side and it's not attached on the other side and they're
spring loaded. The spindle is not attached to the axle, but the clutch arms are attached to the
spindle. So when you throw this thing down, it's going to spin slower at first and the clutch is
engaged. As it gets faster all of a sudden, it's enough inertia to pop the clutch essentially
against the edges and it releases the spindle, which makes the whole thing spin faster on the
axis. Right. The centrifugal force pushes down the weight, which pushes down the arm onto the
spring, which releases the two, which allows it to spin. And it only spins for a certain amount
of time. It's not like the kind that you tug back up. It'll spin till it slows down and then the
clutch locks back down and boom, it shoots back up. Right back up. I want to, I want to, I wish
we had one of those. I want to see what it's like. So basically the big, the two modifications are
based on separating the string from the axle by creating two different kinds of, I guess,
axles or spindles or whatever. Which are really just sort of taking the Filipino design a step
further because although it made contact with the axle, it wasn't quote connected to the axle.
Yeah. I guess it was, but it wasn't tight. Right. And a guy named Michael Caffrey is the one who
came up with the yoyo with the brain and Yomega started telling him in 1990, but he came up with
it in 1980. Two years after a man named Tom Kuhn created the no jive three in one yoyo that you
could take apart and replace the axle and do all sorts of modifications with. Oh, really? Big,
big time for changes in yoyo design. So did he rip this dude off? Is that what you're saying?
No. Oh, okay. No, I'm just saying like the two, these two big steps in yoyo design. The way he
said two years after it was sinister. Well, you're a very suspicious person. I am. When it comes to
yoyo design. Chuck, that's pretty much the physics of yoyos. Did you know that? We just explain
how yoyos work. You know, I looked online at videos and stuff to make it a little easier
because this is a very visual thing and they do have videos. But what I found out is that a lot
of teachers, physics teachers use yoyos to describe these whatever four to six properties that we
described. I have to tell you, I understand angular momentum far better now. I understand,
although it went through the yoyos through the football, I understand the moment of inertia.
Okay. All right. Is that moment of inertia? No, that's angular momentum. Angular momentum. Spinning
on an axis. Yeah. Oh, you're talking about the gyroscopic stability. Yeah, that's what it was.
See, I get confused. I do too, Chuck. It's physics, man. Don't feel bad. You want to know a couple
more pieces of yoyo trivia? Yeah, let's hear it. In 1968, one Abby Hoffman of the Chicago Seven
was indicted or charged with contempt of Congress when he started doing the Walk the Dog
during a House Un-American Activities Committee session that was investigating him.
So he was like, I'm just so over this. I'm going to yoyo? Well, apparently the way I read it is
that he was trying to entertain, lighten everything up. He's like, here, watch me yoyo. And he was
walking the dog and the... Who exited? No, not one. So that's how yoyos are connected to McCarthyism.
If you ever take an FYSK quiz and that comes up. Plus, yoyos were huge back then. Totally. That was
like the heyday. I think it was the 60s. Yeah. Nixon, have you seen Nixon try to yoyo? No. Man,
if you don't like Nixon, this will just make you hate him even more. The night that they
opened the Grand Ole Opry sometime in 1974, what's the main guy? The whole cast of he-haws
behind Nixon and then the mate Roy Acuff, he presents Nixon with a yoyo and has to put it
on Nixon's finger and Nixon looks like, what's going on? And then he tries to do it once and it
just kind of like flops down and makes like a sad trombone noise. And he just has this
solemn look on his face. Like, I don't like yoyos. Right. He looks kind of like you did at the
beginning of this episode. Yeah, me and that tricky dick. Who knew? And then they took a yoyo in
space, Chuck. Yeah, I saw that and it still worked. It did work. They found that letting it drop
did nothing because they were testing it in microgravity. But if you throw it, it will go
slowly. You can do it slowly, but it will still spin. And it moves kind of just kind of gracefully
along the string, like in just mid-air horizontally. But it'll never sleep. Well, thank God, NASA did
that. Yeah, back in 1985. Those are all the videos you see, though. They do much more than that.
That was back when NASA was like, we have so much money. We don't know what to do with it.
Exactly. Let's launch something and let's say the Toys and Spaces project. Right. And they did.
Now, this was just for yoyos. That was the only thing they did on that flight. Well,
no, the Toys and Spaces project encompassed 60 shuttle missions. One for each toy that they
tested out. Wow. Jax was one of the best ones. The Bolo paddle. Yeah. So that's yoyos. Frankly,
I'm pretty happy with this one. I thought you were going to lead in with something on yoyo ma.
No. Man, try to look up yoyos in the news and not get yoyo ma.
Geez. Can't do it. Stupid. I searched yoyo minus ma minus ni minus gaba to finally get some stuff
on yoyos. Oh, yogaba gaba, sure. Yeah. Oh, what was the other one? Yo mama? Nio. Yo MTV raps.
That came up too. Did it? Yeah. I stopped searching before I minused MTV too. I didn't know you
could minus. I was in a ju- Yeah. And it'll root out all the search, all the results that have that
in it. So you just put the minus on? Minus and then the next letter, no space. Had no idea.
And you can do a bunch of different ones. No commas, no nothing. Just like minus gaba,
minus yoyo. Really? Minus ma, minus ni. You literally just improved my life. Oh, good. Or
my research it for like the eighth time today. Yeah. The war on drugs impacts everyone. Whether
or not you take drugs. America's public enemy number one is drug abuse. This podcast is going to
show you the truth behind the war on drugs. They told me that I would be charged for conspiracy
to distribute 2,200 pounds of marijuana. Yeah, and they can do that without any drugs on the table.
Without any drugs, of course, yes, they can do that. And I'm a prime example of that. The war
on drugs is the excuse our government uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff.
Stuff that'll piss you off. The property is guilty, exactly. And it starts as guilty.
It starts as guilty. The cops, are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging?
They just have way better names for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being
robbed. They call civil acid for it.
Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get
your podcast. Who do we become when we travel? I have never flown without wearing a suit until
I refuse to do it. Who are we allowed to be? Those blue American passports as powerful as they are,
it doesn't work the same for everyone. And where is everybody going?
I do love to sit near the ocean and drink. Join me, Brendan Francis Nunum, for Not Lost
Chat, a new season of the travel podcast that The New York Times, The Economist, and The Atlantic
named Best of the Year. In each episode of the new season, I'll share an audio postcard from
where I've been, talk to a travel writer about their work, and invite a famous frequent flyer
to come by and answer your travel questions. If I'm sitting in the seat and the person beside me
is acting irate, I'm going to call a flight attendant before I stick my size 13 foot
up their tiny ass. Ah, the joys of air travel. Listen to Not Lost on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. All right. Well, that's it. All right. Yo,
yo, yo. I was in a jewelry store once a Neo came in. It seemed nice. Who's Neo? He's this rapper.
He's from Atlanta. Yeah, I thought you were talking about The Matrix. No, that's like his real
name is Keanu Reeves. That's Neo. This is Neo. Oh, yeah, I've heard of him. Yeah, him. Well,
if you want to learn more about yo-yos, including some really top-notch illustrations, this is one
of those ones that you will see why we have staff illustrators here at HowStuffWorks.com in color.
You want to type in yo-yo in the handy search bar at HowStuffWorks.com. That'll bring up that
really cool article. And I said handy search bar. So now it's time for Chuck to shine with
another edition of Listener Mail. Josh, this is one of our oldest and not by age, but one of our
most loyal fans, Anna Spies. She has a band and they put together, well, let me just read it.
This is coming out shortly after Christmas and she said it was still great to read this.
Hi, guys. I'm Jerry. Since we're firmly in the festive, greedy little griff of the holiday season,
I was wondering if you could give a shout out to a project I'm involved in, or my band is, at least.
It's a charity album to raise funds for the continued fallout from the Japanese earthquake
and nuclear disaster. In the light of everything that's happened since, I know it's been put on
the back burner of most people's charitable contributions, which is why we were thrilled
and honored to do our part to re-raise awareness when the label releasing this compilation
approached us to contribute a track. So, you know, she's right. You hear about these tragedies
that happen and then six months later you kind of forget about it. It's the curse of the new cycle.
Exactly. But luckily there's a lot of people that my friend Dave is one of them that's still working
like on the tsunami from five or six years ago. Oh, that's great. So continued help is always needed.
There's a CD. It's going to be out in mid-December. So by the time this comes out, it'll already be out.
You can stream the entire album, which is 37 tracks by 37 artists on the website,
MoreHopeForJapan.com. And her band, New Century Classics,
wrote and recorded a brand new song just for this compilation, and she's quite proud of it.
And I haven't had a chance to listen to it yet, but I'm kind of. And she says there's a lot of
far better known artists on there and anyone who likes instrumental music, post-rock, ambient,
and basically pretty melodic guitar based tunes should dig it. So check it out. That's Anna's
band, New Century Classics. Cool. MoreHopeForJapan.com. Very cool. Thanks a lot, Anna. Appreciate that.
Thanks for letting us know. Thanks for doing what you do. And thanks for listening for like
years. She's been around forever. Yeah. Yeah. I guess if you're working on something that you feel
like everybody's forgotten and shouldn't have, let us know. And we'll try to help you re-raise
awareness too. Yeah. Send us a tweet to S-Y-S-K podcast, or you can shoot us Facebook something,
facebook.com slash stuff you should know. And as always, you can get really personal and send us
an email, a real live email to stuffpodcastathowstuffworks.com. For more on this and thousands of
other topics, visit howstuffworks.com. To learn more about the podcast, click on the podcast icon
in the upper right corner of our homepage. The How Stuff Works iPhone app has arrived.
Download it today on iTunes. Brought to you by the reinvented 2012 Camry. It's ready. Are you?
The war on drugs is the excuse our government uses to get away with absolutely insane stuff.
Stuff that'll piss you off. The cops, are they just like looting? Are they just like pillaging?
They just have way better names for what they call like what we would call a jack move or being
robbed. They call civil answer. Be sure to listen to the war on drugs on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Here's today's Fortnite weather report. iHeartland
has been hit by a major blizzard. The snow has turned iHeartland and Fortnite into a winter
wonderland with new festive games, including a winter themed escape room, a holiday obstacle
course, ice skating, hidden holiday gifts, and more. Look out for upcoming special events from
your favorite artists and podcasters all month, along with scavenger hunts and new how fan are
huge challenges. So embrace the holidays at iHeartland in Fortnite. Head to iHeartRadio.com
slash iHeartland today.